Stone and Blond Brick House Trim Colors
June 20, 2007 § 261 Comments
When you’re dealing with natural materials, I like to stay in the earth tones for trim color. And there’s nothing more striking than a dark wood door on a stone facade. For me, it just conjures up images of castles and old English cottages. Choosing colors that come out of the natural variation in the stone or brick makes the most sense to me. Yes, we’re talking creams, taupes, and tans. But depending on the tones in your stone or blond brick, you could lean in the clay red direction or chocolate brown.
Keeping the house natural may seem blah, but that’s the way the house would look if it were built centuries ago. Don’t ignore the roof color though, and if you’re choosing a roof for a stone or brick house, I would avoid a lot of color variation on the roof. It will look really busy if the roof is not a solid color. Some people like that — but I get migraines.
Keeping Up with the Joneses’ House Colors
June 18, 2007 § 8 Comments
Businesses need to attract attention and this day spa does so in a good way with a very pleaseing cornflower blue color scheme. Some over-55 communities also have similar colorful palettes for their house colors. The builder chooses the colors, of course, but they all go together nicely. One community in New England I saw advertised in the Boston Globe had very brightly colored homes, from sunflower yellow to peacock blue. That’s terrific.
If you live in a community (particularly new construction where you’re not concerned with historic palettes) in which all your neighbors are painting their houses bright colors, and you’d like to follow suit, go for it. When I mentioned in previous posts that your house should fit into its environment, those brightly colored neighbors’ homes ARE part of that environment.
The problem comes when your neighbors all have traditional home colors, white, grey, khaki green, colonial blue, and we come upon YOUR house in a neon salmon. We all like to march to our own drummers, but sometimes it just doesn’t look good. You get the picture.
Should Gutters Match House, Roof, or Trim Paint Color?
June 1, 2007 § 39 Comments
Gutters are the functional part of your house and you don’t want to accent them in any way. Match the gutters to whatever color is behind them. If the gutters run along the trim, match the gutters to the trim color so the gutters disappear. If a gutter runs along the house, then match the gutter to the house color. That way the gutters will not be the first things you notice from the street.
Just like metal roofs, however, there are some fancy gutter materials like copper that will stand out against any trim and will become a design feature of your house. Just something to keep in mind.
Consider Your Home’s Roof Color: A Major Design Statement
May 31, 2007 § 385 Comments
Not too long ago, roof color was black — or a shade of black. Today, coordinating roof and house colors or choosing a new roof can be quite a project. So many choices and expensive ones at that. It is important to make a wise decision to avoid a long-term design disaster.
If you’re due for a new roof, congratulations! You now have a chance to select your roof color from the myriad choices that are available. Here are a few guidelines and considerations:
Traditional Shingle Roofs
- Gray or blue house. Stay with a traditional roof color like dark gray or black. That way your roof will blend with your house and make the whole structure seem bigger. Any other roof color will stand out too much and make the house look chopped up.
- Cream, tan, or light brown house. Consider the many brown roof options, some of them with a mixture of browns that really make the house look updated and terrific. A brown roof will blend with the cream or tan and make the house look bigger. Black and gray roofs just look ordinary. A brown roof looks like you actually planned out your entire color scheme.
- White house. Dark gray and black are traditional, but they work. Blue is also a terrific option. Red or green metal on a white farmhouse give a traditional country look. Bottom line on a white house: you have lots of options.
- Red, green, or yellow house. You can go either way, a brown or a gray/black roof. I prefer a brown roof for red and green house colors and a black roof for a yellow house.
Of course, the same suggestions apply if you are stuck with your roof color and are looking for a paint color for the house.
- Black/gray roof. The ideal house colors are gray, blue, white, and yellow.
- Brown roof. The ideal house colors are cream, tan, brown, red, green.
- Green roof and other colors. You can either use the roof as an accent color to the house or try to blend it by using a lighter tint of the roof color on the house itself.
Nontraditional Roofs
What about metal roofs? They’re all over Colorado, Upstate New York, and other areas of the world where snow on the roof is a major factor in the winter. Metal roofs come in a rainbow of colors, from red to green to brown to purple. If you have a metal roof, you are making a design statement (whether you mean to or not, of course) and you can treat it as an accent color, kind of like picking a front-door color. However, if you do not want to call attention to your metal roof, choose a natural roof color like dark charcoal, bronze, black, or brown instead of a color like blue.
What about terracotta roofs? These are traditionally seen on Mediterranean style homes and are a definite design feature. Keep the house color neutral to highlight the beautiful roof and the other architectural elements that are undoubtedly present.
Other nontraditional roof materials. Just like a thatched roof on an English cottage, a nontraditional roof is a design feature of the home. Hopefully, you want it that way. Choose a house color that makes the roof look like you planned it as a feature.
Regardless of what kind of roof you have, make sure you consider it when making house color decisions.
Creating a Neutral Living Room
May 29, 2007 § 5 Comments
Neutral doesn’t need to be blah. A neutral color scheme can have color, from tans to greens to blues to light yellows. The big difference between “neutral” and other color schemes is that neutral schemes do not use accent colors that are opposite on the color wheel. For example, in a room with sage green walls, a complimentary color scheme might include a red chair or red pillows on the sofa whereas a neutral color scheme would replace the complimentary color with texture.
Another difference between a neutral scheme and other designs is that neutral rooms tend not to have a mixture of lots of large patterns. Neutral schemes do not want to attract particular attention to one piece of furniture but create an overall restful look.
When you are creating a neutral living room:
- Add Texture. If you are keeping a monochromatic color scheme, whether it’s beige, white, green or blue, you need to create visual interest in the room. And texture is a great way to do that. By adding nubby pillows and a soft mohair throw on the sofa, woven wood blinds on the windows, and a sisal rug on the floor, you have added various textures to the room and created not only tactile but visual interest. The textures stand out against the neutral backdrop.
- Keep your large furniture pieces solid. A large flowered, multi-colored sofa does not lend itself to a neutral color scheme unless the pattern is tone-on-tone (various shades of the same hue). The fabric on the furniture can have lots of texture, however, and even a small pattern. But the sofa needs to read as one color when you stand back. Keeping the large pieces in a solid color allows for maximum versatility. You won’t get tired of them either.
- Use colorful artwork as your focal point. Instead of using color in your furnishings, let colorful art attract all the attention. Just like an art gallery has white walls to highlight the color in the artwork, a neutral background is ideal for featuring an art collection in your living room.
- Add color with your accessories. As a decorator, it’s really fun to use a neutral color scheme and add color with pots, baskets, art, vases, flowers, candles, and collectibles. Then you can change the color with the seasons or when you get tired of it. I like to have winter pillows and summer pillows. My winter pillows are a red Ralph Lauren floral print (kind of stuffy but warm) and my summer pillows are beige and light yellow striped with fringe (fun and carefree looking). And with my neutral living room, I can change the accessories as new colors come into fashion. Much cheaper than redoing the living room every few years.
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Consider neutral when a) you’re selling your house (neutral schemes allow buyers to see themselves in your home); b) you live in a small house without much light (a monochromatic color scheme will make the room appear larger); and 3) you like to change your mind about color frequently (instead of repainting and recovering the furniture every few years, change out the accessories only). Neutral color schemes never go out of style. You can add to them and subtract from them as your tastes and home interior styles change.
Update an Old Colonial with Lighting and Fresh Color
May 26, 2007 § Leave a comment
Location, location, location. You’ve just closed on the purchase of an older colonial in a beautiful, tree-lined neighborhood that’s perfect for the kids. But the house clearly needs updating. There is old dingy wallpaper throughout, many of the rooms have dark wood panelling, and the lighting, if you can call it that, is totally inadequate. Where to begin.
1) Call the electrician. The first thing to do is update the lighting. Plan to invest in recessed cans in the living room, family room, and kitchen. The result will be dramatic. Recessed lights around the perimeter of the room will highlight any artwork that you put up and will add a nice glow to the room. Remember to install dimmer switches on everything.
2) Move on to your front hallway. Is it dark? Replace the hanging light fixture that’s been there since the early ’60s. And while you’re at the home improvement store, why not pick up a new light fixture for the guest bath and a mirror to replace the existing medicine cabinet.
3) Plan your new color scheme by selecting a palette of three basic colors, all of which go together. The easiest way to do this is to choose colors that have the same hue value, and in our example, the values will be on the light side since the homeowners prefer light walls and it’s dark in there already. For example, for this house, we chose a light yellow tint (C2’s Filtered 3121), a fresh pale green (C2’s Lichen 4262), and a very airy blue (C2’s Alpine 5137).
4) Distribute those three colors throughout the public spaces. We decided to use the yellow for the front hallway and up the stairs, the green for the living room, the blue for the dining room, and the green again for the family room.
5) Add accent colors where needed. We chose a slightly darker blue (C2’s Rivulet 5144) to go beneath the chair rail in the dining room and in the half bath off the hallway, a darker green (C2’s Balsam 4073) to go on the kitchen backsplash next to the adjoining light green family room and behind the built in white shelves in the family room.
6) Pick your trim and ceiling color. We chose Benjamin Moore’s White Dove semi-gloss. Keeping the same trim color throughout the whole house makes the house feel more spacious and less chopped up. And the creamy white color ages very well and blends with white sinks and other appliances without standing out too much. As for the panelling in the family room, it will be White Dove as will the built-in cabinetry. We chose a Super White for the ceiling to give off maximum light.
And that’s it. We chose a very pleasing palette of colors that will provide a nice backdrop to their furniture and since we chose colors that go together, the house will have harmony and a sense of flow from room to room.
Color Combos that Add Drama and Curb Appeal
May 25, 2007 § Leave a comment
Whether you are choosing a landscape palette to coordinate with your house colors or giving your living room a fresh kick, contrasting colors give that punch of color that just says Wow.
The colors that are opposite on the color wheel are complimentary — they offer the most contrast and add the biggest pizzazz to your decorating scheme. We already know that adding blue-and-green pillows to a blue sofa will make the colors blend, but adding orange pillows to the blue sofa will make those colors “pop.” And the same is true when you’re planning your front yard landscape.

For example, if you have a blue or blue-gray house with a black door and want to add some drama and curb appeal, consider focusing on oranges and orangey yellows (like Stella de Oro daylilies, for example) in your garden. The complimentary colors enhance each other and make both the house and the garden stand out.
If you have a brick house, the green plantings are really going to stand out. I would suggest using a mixture of greens including some of the yellow-green shrubs (like a jade barberry) and the yellow-green hosta to enhance both the garden and the brick.
If you have a yellow house with a black door, a hot pink rhododendron bush in the front yard will look smashing. You don’t have to use the exact color that is opposite on the color wheel. You can use the colors that are on either side of the opposite color. You’ll still get contrast and a more sophisticated palette.
Use your front door as your inspiration. If you’ve chosen a contrasting color for the front door of your house, say a rusty red on a louisburg green (Ben Moore HC113) house, carry that color into the front yard with a red azalea, a burning bush, and a bed of red tulips.
If you’ve chosen a lighter green house (like prescott green, Ben Moore HC140) and a dark purple door, add a beautiful lilac bush to your yard and other purple shrubs and flowers. This latter color scheme does not use contrasting reds to go opposite the green but adjacent (analogous) colors in the blue and purple family. Although the contrast is not as dramatic, coordinating the landscape and door color still makes an eye-catching curb appeal. The key is to choose plants that bloom at different times so you have continuous color in your yard.
The English garden look with a variety of colors in the garden is traditional and quite lovely. But if you’d like real drama in your front yard landscape, consider sticking to just one color family in the garden. My sister-in-law has a stunning totally blue garden with every kind of blue and blue-purple flower mixed with white flowers to bring out the color. White always enhances color, inside and out.
If your house is white, you have free reign of the color wheel. But my best advice is to select flowers and flowering shrubs that have the same color intensity instead of mixing the bright flowers with the pastels. If you stick with either all bright or all pastel, you can mix all the colors and create a spectacular landscape.
Just a little color planning that extends from the house, trim, and front door colors to the landscape plantings will give your yard that finished designer-inspired look.
Quick Tips for Small Windows and Short Ceilings
May 23, 2007 § Leave a comment
Every home has a few quirks: from small windows and short ceilings to odd angles and peculiar niches. And it’s not just old houses either. Even new houses have challenges, from oversized rooms that echo to a lack of wall space for art (we’ll deal with those problems later). Here are a couple of quick tips that won’t cost much money but will help you solve some common decorating dilemmas.
Problem 1: Lots of small windows. How can I disguise them and make them look bigger?
Solution: Correct the placement of your window treatments. To disguise the fact that your windows are too small, first remove all the curtains, valances, panels, and anything else that’s currently on the windows. Then take a look at the window placement on the wall. Is there a lot of space above the window between the window frame and the ceiling or moulding? If so, terrific.
Reposition your curtain rod so that it’s about two inches from either the ceiling or the moulding. A 14″ valance hung from just below the ceiling should not cover anything more than the wood and possibly a pulled up window shade at the top of the window. That trick will maximize the visual height of your window and maximize the light coming through it.
If you have panels, make sure they stack outside the window and do not cover anything more than the wood window frame on either side. That will increase the visual width of your window without compromising any of the light.
Bottom line: Your window treatments can be larger than your window and hung higher and wider, and that trick will make your windows appear larger than they really are.
Problem 2: The ceilings in my ranch are only 7′ high. Is there any way to make the room feel taller?
Solution: Hang vertical panels on the windows instead of horizontal valances. Just like vertical lines on clothing can make someone look taller, the same trick works for room height. If you have a ranch or a cape with a large picture window in the living room and a very short ceiling, avoid the temptation to put a long horizontal valance over the window. Instead, hang panels (vertical striped panels would be terrific) on either side of the window. The vertical lines will add height to the room. If you’d prefer no window treatments at all, consider painting tone-on-tone vertical stripes on the walls. Again, the vertical lines will add height.
How to Disguise an Old Color Scheme
May 21, 2007 § 2 Comments
If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em. If you’re stuck with avocado, harvest gold, or bubblegum bathroom sinks and fixtures and you’re not ready to gut the room and update it completely, then you need to disguise that old color scheme. The best way to do it is to blend the sink color into the wall color.
For example, if you have a yellowy pea green sink, tub, and toilet, choose a lighter version of that color greyed down. Benjamin Moore’s castleton mist (HC-1), a muted yellow green, or beacon hill damask (HC-2), a muted greenish yellow, will blend those fixtures into the wall color, make the room look bigger, and disguise the age of the bathroom (for at least a little while). Use crisp white towels, and some black accents to dress the room and you’re set. Warm the room up a bit with some hot pink accessories and I think you’ll be happy enough with the bathroom that you can wait for the right time to remodel.
The same approach will work for harvest gold and even bubblegum pink. If you choose a wall color that is different from the fixture color, you risk highlighting the old fixtures. If you choose a wall color that is the same or slightly lighter than the fixture color, you will disguise the old fixtures.
Let’s Talk About Color: Turquoise
May 21, 2007 § 8 Comments
It’s back. Call it turquoise or a bluer version of seafoam but it’s back. Resurrected from the ’70s, turquoise is popping up everywhere from bathrooms to master bedrooms, to kitchens. It is a fresh, youthful hue that is both soothing and inspiring and it ranges from the bluer version, for example, tropical teal (Benjamin Moore’s #732) and the ice cold jack frost (Ben Moore #729), to the greener version, for example, the darker floradale isle (#581) and the pale tropical paradise (#575).
Paired with crisp white only, turquoise looks terrific, but a little bit dated. Same with the traditional turquoise/peach pairing. Typical Florida –yawn — it’s been done. But combine turquoise with a variety of its neighboring hues on the color wheel, from clearer blues to the yellow greens, like tasty apple (Ben Moore #416), and suddenly you have a more contemporary look. Add white to make the colors pop and you have a spectacular fresh new room.
So if you have old turquoise tiles from the early ’70s in your bathroom and you don’t want to gut the room, try painting the walls an icy version of the turquoise. Use plush white towels and some apple green soaps and other accents and you have an updated look.
Special Note: Unless you live in the tropics or the Southwest where turquoise occurs naturally in the environment, I suggest confining the color to the inside. If you really want to use turquoise outside, make it an accent color — like the front door on a light mint-green house. Or chairs on the deck. There’s no other color that screams vacation like turqouise.
