Anyone own different color of crown molding & baseboards contained by respectively the rooms? Would it look stupid to have white crown molding & white baseboard...

Would it look stupid to have white crown molding & white baseboard in living room/kitchen/dining (open space plan) when the rest of house have oak??
I enjoy brown trim in the living room, forest green in the dining room, and coca-cola red within the kitchen. The only reason that those are painted at adjectives is b/c some stupid previous owner decided it would be a good hypothesis to paint the original cherry wood trim white. This is an Arts & Crafts style bungalow that was built contained by the 1920s. Fools. Thank god they left someof it untouched in the bedrooms & upstairs hallway.

My original thought was to strip the paint & restore the wood, but that proved to be too much or a backache in the neck for me so I relented & painted it over again. I expect having colors is so much more interesting than plain white.

I do intend to try a faux finish wood-graining technique next time, to at least possible make it look like the resourceful color & texture.
As a designer, I would ask you to consider a few things first. What is the architectural style of the house? Does it coordinate and promote the oak or the more contemporary white? And how are the spaces near the oak molding connected to the spaces that will have the white molding? There are plenty of houses that have different scheme to individual rooms, but still keep a sense of consistency to the overall design. There are also examples of keeping the base surrounded by a room a different color than the crown believe it or not and it works. It won't look bad if you have a break of some sort between the two different styles. Corners are great for that, as are doorways. You can donate vertical molding at the places where the two meet, which also is a "break". Most of the time, the best passageway to know if you'll like it is to install a bit of white molding where you own the most worry - if it looks great, then finish. But if it looks "off", after you can try another idea.

Just my preference: I prefer equivalent colors, but I also prefer "safe" choices where others may take that leap. It's really up to you! Good luck.
Answers:    Would it make you happier?
I guess you should look at how this open space connects to the rest of the trim & attitude it from all the applicable angles.
But why white aside from aesthetics? Stain & polyurethane is like the most durable maintainance-wise, so if it's simply the price difference between pine & oak you should also be thinking of what the base-board's going to cost to keep looking white.
I was purely working on a lot of white risers on a staircase w/kids & some of them got touched up a half-dozen times since I left.
But if you like white & it works out ably for you, then go for it.
The three bedrooms and 1 1/2 bat in my home are different interiro designs. The lving room design blends into the kitchen and the bathroom. The exterior has moldings that are subtle even so noticable at second glance compared to other homes. No!