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 Benjamin
Moore's Color Viewer

Interior Painting Tips
Choosing
Colors For Your Home
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How Colors
Enhance A Room

With all the colors in the world, it's hard to know exactly which
one to use when painting your house. Those of you determined to
fairly represent each hue might set out to paint one room red, one
orange, one yellow, one green, one blue, one indigo, and one violet.
But, for everyone else, painting a room has less to do with equal
opportunity decorating and more to do with personal taste.
Still, colors have their limits and certain ones are better at doing
certain things. The following is a list of tips describing what each
color has the potential to do when it finds itself up against a
wall.
White: Painting a room white will make the room look bigger
and cleaner (until your three year old decides to smear a mural of
ketchup on the back wall). White is an ideal color when you are
looking to add a lot of different hues: white, like black, goes with
almost anything. Painting with white can give rooms a pure and
bright look, while using that white to accentuate other colors. But,
be careful: using too much white can make a room too bright, and
make it hard to look at. If people routinely run from your room
yelling "My eyes, my eyes," chances are, you've overdone it.
Black: Like white, black is an ideal color when you want to
mix and match shades. Though black has the potential to make a room
look too dark or too small, it also has a solid conventional appeal.
A black wall, like a black piece of clothing, captures a sensuous,
secretive, and intelligent look. Appearing more intellectual and
sophisticated than all the other colors, you will be much more
likely to catch your black wall reading the short stories of Rudyard
Kipling than your white one.
Orange: Depending on the brightness, the color orange can be
a hue that demands notice - like a shade perpetually screaming "Look
at me!" It can also be welcoming or it can be a soothing earth tone.
Because of this versatility, orange is a popular color in
decorating. A room used for socializing can benefit from the use of
bright (but not too bright) orange and a room used for relaxing can
benefit from a darker orange. But orange, like all colors, has its
limits: you have to be careful of the colors you mix and match.
Orange with black might come across as too Halloween-ish, orange
with pink might remind people of sherbert, and orange with blue
might deem you - among your neighbors - a die hard Denver Bronco
fan.
Blue: Blue is perhaps the most natural of colors: the sky is
blue, the ocean is blue, even peoples' moods are sometimes described
as blue. The "naturalness" that blue evokes makes it a good color
for a bathroom or a bedroom. In a bathroom, blue can represent water
and cleanliness (without being as bright as white). In a bedroom,
blue is calming and can help you rest more peacefully. It's
conservative, but not too conservative (it's not a Republican). It
is also just dim enough to keep your bedroom dark, and free of the
sunlight that can wake you up before you're ready.
Green: Green has the unique ability to emit freshness:
painting a wall the regular shade of green is like panting your
house with a garden. This gives your house a new, spring like feel:
yes, even in the dead of winter. Like blue, green is also very
natural: grass is green, trees are green, and the stems of flowers
are green. Darker or forest greens can be used for a harvest look,
one that is soothing and comforting, while lighter greens can be
used for a more vibrant, stylish look.
Red: The color red is a dichotomy: it represents both danger
and romance. For this reason, red is best used in bedrooms or rooms
that are begging for a confident look, such as a library. Red is
typically not a good color to use for bathrooms (who wants to be
sexy while brushing their teeth), or rooms that you want to look
open and large, such as living rooms. Red is also not a good color
to paint the outside of your house: doing so can make it resemble a
barn, causing livestock to flock to your front door at sunrise. You
might find yourself up to your elbows in cows, but at least you
won't ever have to buy milk again.
Jennifer Jordan is the senior editor for
http://www.etodoors.com .
Someone who changes her mind every five minutes, her house is in a
perpetual state of home improvement.
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jennifer_Jordan
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