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Best Tips On Creating Color Throughout Your Home



Color preferences vary as much as personalities. Some folks love the bright and the bold, but others feel most protected surrounded by neutrals. The good news is that in regards to color, there really is no"ideal" palette.


That being said, we have all been inside homes where an explosion of color created a undesirable feel between rooms -- and sometimes, the need to get out of that room.


An unbelievable way to avoid this result is to hire an interior designer to help direct your remodeling or decorating project or simply to advise you on the best colors for your spaces.


Here are a few tips from our interior designers to help ease the process.


Select A Flow-Through Paint


One seamless way to create a cohesive feel is to use a consistent paint color on the walls of linking spaces. More then ever, in homes that have more of an open floor plan, it is ideal to select 1 color that is going to serve as your main color or your neutral.


Now that doesn't mean it has to be white or beige or gray. But the foyer, the hallways and that main connector room should all be the same color because you want to have that dominant color in your space.


Pay Attention to Sight lines


Sometime, certain clients might want more variety in their wall colors. When that happens to be the situation, think about sightlines.


Think about it like this; if you are standing in the living room, what other rooms are you going to see? If you have a view into the kitchen, then the dining room and the foyer, then the colors for all those spaces will need to work nicely together. It can begin to look really weird if you have a different color scheme in each room.


Choose Color Groups


One way to make the color scheme flow from room to room is to restrict yourself to colors at the same temperature group.


Some individuals will adhere to a warm color palette -- reds and oranges and yellows or a cool strategy -- grays and greens and blues.


Another alternative, is to select one or two colors and then use assortments of it. If the main color is blue, you might decide on a gray-blue, a pure blue and a navy paint as you go from room to room. The same idea can be used for decorative accessories.


For wall paint, you can ask the paint shop to create a"tint" of a specific color, perhaps knocking down the main color by 50 percent, which the mixer will do by adding white. They can create a lighter or darker version of it. That's a good way to synchronize without placing the same color everywhere. Paint decks can also be a fantastic inspiration source for finding colors that work well together.

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