Moroccan
Explore AI-generated Moroccan kitchen designs. Upload your room photo and get photorealistic results in under 30 seconds.
Redesign my kitchen in Moroccan
Why This Pairing Works
A kitchen is primarily about cooking, food preparation, and often casual dining. Moroccan brings zellige tiles & carved screens to this space, creating an environment that feels energising and efficient. The style's emphasis on jewel-tone colour palette pairs naturally with the kitchen's need for task-focused lighting. When it comes to durability, Moroccan works here because kitchen surfaces need very high — surfaces must resist heat, moisture, staining, and heavy daily use resistance, and the style's material palette accommodates that.
Design Elements
Choose a cabinetry that embodies Moroccan — zellige tiles & carved screens. In a kitchen, this is the piece that sets the tone for everything else.
Add island or breakfast bar and countertops that reinforce the Moroccan aesthetic. Look for pieces with jewel-tone colour palette to build visual cohesion.
Apply the Moroccan palette to your kitchen using the 60-30-10 rule: dominant colour on walls and large surfaces, secondary on upholstery and textiles, accent on decorative objects and hardware.
Kitchen lighting should be task-focused. For Moroccan, choose fixtures with layered patterns & lanterns to reinforce the aesthetic.
Since your kitchen needs very high — surfaces must resist heat, moisture, staining, and heavy daily use durability, select materials that align with Moroccan's palette — jewel-tone colour palette — while meeting the practical demands of the space.
Complete your Moroccan kitchen with accessories that solve creating an efficient work triangle between sink, stove, and fridge. Consider bar stools and decorative elements that add personality without compromising the style's core principles.
Colour Palette
The signature palette for Moroccan spaces. Use the 60-30-10 rule: dominant colour on walls and large surfaces, secondary on furniture, accent on details.
Cobalt
#1E90FF
Saffron
#DAA520
Wine
#800020
Emerald
#2E8B57
Common Questions
A moroccan kitchen typically uses jewel-tone colour palette. Apply your chosen palette with the 60-30-10 rule: 60% dominant neutral on walls, 30% secondary shade on furniture and textiles, and 10% accent colour on decorative details. This creates a cohesive moroccan feel while ensuring the space remains energising and efficient.
Start with the core principles of Moroccan — zellige tiles & carved screens — and adapt them to your kitchen's specific needs. Since a kitchen is primarily used for cooking, food preparation, and often casual dining, focus on balancing aesthetics with strict functional requirements. Layer in lighting that is task-focused to set the right mood.
Key pieces for a moroccan kitchen include cabinetry, island or breakfast bar, countertops. Look for furniture that features zellige tiles & carved screens — the defining characteristic of the style. Since kitchen furniture needs very high — surfaces must resist heat, moisture, staining, and heavy daily use durability, choose materials that look the part while holding up to very high — often the busiest room in the home traffic.
Try It Yourself
Upload a photo of your kitchen and InteriorPro's AI will redesign it in Moroccan style — photorealistic results in under 30 seconds.
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