Nate Berkus Always Obsesses Over This Character-Boosting Kitchen Detail

Going the extra mile won’t cost you extra either.
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Photography by Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images

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You’d think replacing your kitchen countertops would be a one-and-done decision. Pick the new material and you’re set, right? Not if you’re Nate Berkus. The interior designer recently revealed there’s a second choice he obsesses over when it comes to counters: the profile of the edge. 

“A novice decorator or designer is going to help you pick out your marble and then be like, let’s just do a straight edge, or what’s called an eased edge, which is slightly softer,” Berkus shared with cookbook author and TV food critic Katie Lee Biegel, one of his longtime design clients, on her podcast, All on the Table. “But as you’re in this business for years, you realize that to create moments of beautiful character and personality in a space, the edge of a countertop actually matters.” His preferred profile, and the one he used in Biegel’s latest kitchen? Ogee, a swooping S shape.

dark green kitchen
Courtesy of DeVol Kitchens 

His advice gets even better: It won’t cost you extra to achieve the elegant curve—“it has to be cut!” he points out. As we looked over some of our favorite kitchen renovations that have ogee counters, we realized that the detail pairs well with a whole range of styles. 

The finish can lean traditional in a space with white stone and raised-panel cabinets (the powder blue space by Arterberry Cooke and Captex Construction, above, stars Bianco Olinda marble). But when used on a superdark material, like the black Silestone in this London kitchen on the right, it reads modern.

skirt below green counter
Photography by Lauren Miller

The intricate groove can also act as an arrow of sorts, helping call attention to the hardware on the cabinets—or in the case of the June Motel, the skirt fabric—below. Another perk? An ogee edge will make budget-friendly choices like stock cupboards look more expensive than they really are.  

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Lydia Geisel

Home Editor

Lydia Geisel has been on the editorial team at Domino since 2017. Today, she writes and edits home and renovation stories, including house tours, before and afters, and DIYs, and leads our design news coverage. She lives in New York City.