Hello, my friend, hello again; today we come together to talk about 10 Color Mistakes Everyone Makes and hope the blog can help you.
Step away from the paintbrush! You might just be committing one of the most common color mistakes. Before you decide on a paint color for the room you’re redecorating, take a step back and gather inspiration. Discover ideas by flipping through magazines and collecting imagery that appeals to you. Then, put them together in a folder or portfolio you can peruse when you have leisure time. As you review your choices, define the mood you want to evoke. Will this room be the place where you relax and unwind? Or, do you want the color to bring energy into the space? The ideas that bubble to the top will lay the groundwork for the room’s color palette.You don’t necessarily have to start from scratch. Let colors from key elements that you love throughout your home inform your choices. Once you have an idea of the colors you want, take full advantage of the sample sizes available at the paint store. Paint a few 2×2-foot squares in different areas of the room, and live with them for about a week. Take note of what you like and dislike at different times of the day, in both natural and artificial light. Wading through paint colors for your next room can be overwhelming, but don’t lose hope. Some of the top color experts weigh in on what to avoid when beautifying your home. Click through to read their advice.
A Word to the Wise
Ever visited a home where color is used in abundance and then think to yourself, “I want to do the same thing in my house”? Fast forward to the paint store, where you stand frozen in front of a sea of paint chips. The hesitation is understandable. Selecting colors for your home can be daunting. There are simply too many questions—from what shade to choose to how to coordinate the furnishings and fabrics you already own with a new wall color. Because it can be helpful to learn from others’ mistakes, we spoke with experts about the color missteps they’ve seen. Read on to see where fellow homeowners went wrong, and how you can get it right.
Following Trends
The colors you live with everyday need to be colors you love, not simply whatever happens to be all the rage in fashion and product design. “Even if you absolutely love the current trend colors, they are best used in small doses, like throw pillows or fabric patterns—not for repainting your entire home,” confirms color consultant Barbara Jacobs, of Barbara Jacobs Color and Design.
“Never paint your walls first and then try to add furnishings and fabrics that coordinate with that color,” advises Carla Aston, principal of Designed with Carla Aston. “You should always start with the items that occupy a room, like a rug or sofa, and then choose a paint color that works with them.”
Some colors will look just as you’d imagined when viewed in bright sunlight, but not as expected when lit by a lamp in the evening. Before committing to a color on all four walls, always put up a sample swatch and live with it for some time to check the color in the space, advises Lauren Muse, principal of Muse Interiors. “Leave it up and observe it at different times of day.”
Homeowners often pass on white paint when they are looking for color, thinking that their choices will be limited to pure white and creamy ecru. But what we think of as “white” today has grown to include a broad range of shades that incorporate hints of lavender, green, blue, and gray. If a pale hue is intriguing, include this color family in your search.
Turning a Color Combination into a Color Competition
When you’re working with a two-color scheme, don’t try to use an equal amount of both hues in the space. Instead, allow one hue to be the dominant force in the room and the other to be the accent color, says Joni Spear, of Joni Spear Interior Design. “Add yellow tones to a blue space or vice versa,” she explains.
“Ceilings are a large expanse of space that are sometimes overlooked when developing a room’s overall palette,” says Sara McLean, color specialist for Dunn-Edwards Paints. To maximize your ceiling’s impact on a room, you might choose a pale shade that complements the walls, a high-gloss white, or a bold hue that acts as a room’s main source of color.
When choosing paint colors for multiple rooms—especially ones that offer a view from one into the next—homeowners sometimes select favorite shades that don’t necessarily work together. For a more cohesive look, plan ahead and pick shades close together on the color spectrum, like yellow, green, and blue.
“I like to compare five to seven values of the same tone, eliminating them one by one until we have the best two,” says Sharon Radovich, principal designer at Panache Interior Designs. Compare both for slight differences at all hours of the day, “and typically one trumps the other,” she says. If not, test them both with a sample swatch before proceeding.
Sticking to a Single Color
So you’ve found a favorite color. But simply splashing it up on the walls makes it done. Every hue available at the paint store comes with a family of many shades and tints, so pick up a few extra swatches to identify what those might be for your color of choice. Sharon Radovich of Panache Interior Designs suggests mixing in a few of these on your cabinets, walls, trim, even furniture for a more monochromatic scheme. The extra contrast will make any space more interesting.
Choosing the perfect paint color for your living room, kitchen, or bedroom can take a ridiculous amount of time. What starts with a simple tour of the hardware store’s paint chip display, can evolve into a pretty painstaking process—especially if you choose the wrong color and have to start all over again. These 9 simple shortcuts will help you select the right paint color every single time.
Interior paint color reflects taste, affects moods, and showcases or downplays a home’s features and shortcomings. Knowing how color works to fool the eye will help you select the right hue for your room.
Red symbolizes strength, power, and courage, but at this time of year we associate it most with love and desire. Around Valentine’s Day, it seems like red is everywhere, but in some homes, red is a permanent—and vibrant—fixture year-round. Aside from beauty, what are the benefits of decorating with this strong color? Some enthusiasts cite the concept of color psychology, which examines how certain colors can affect our moods and behavior. For example, as red is considered a very energizing color, it might be good to use in a rec room or a high-traffic area like the kitchen. Color psychologists warn, however, that simply being in a red room can actually raise blood pressure, which makes red a bad choice for some folks. And note that red increases appetite—witness its extensive use in fast-food advertising—so dieters might want to go easy on it in the dining room. Psychology aside, there are lots of reasons to decorate with red, as this rich, vivid group of rooms prove. While some take the plunge and swathe a space in the color, others use it primarily as an accent in an otherwise neutral room—but they all celebrate the power of this warm, attention-getting hue.