A home is supposed to be a sanctuary, a place where
you escape the chaos of everyday life. But sometimes those sacred spaces get
pretty chaotic almost on their own. Maybe it’s clutter that’s overtaking your
space, or maybe it’s something far worse: room colors that fail to harmonize.
Repainting can be a big job, but if you go in with a plan you can create the
home you’ve always wanted.
The Key? Think Globally
It can be very tempting to think of
your home as a series of rooms, each wholly independent of one another. The
truth is something different, though. Houses are actually a series of rooms
that work together to create an overall atmosphere (plus, you know, a place to
give you shelter and to store your stuff). When you consider how your rooms
actually work together, you can choose colors that are far more likely to play
well together room by room.
Start with the obvious: the rooms
that are literally connected to one another. Unless you have a teenager, the
chances are high that the doors will stay open long enough for you to be able
to spy one room as you’re going through another. And, of course, you may have
rooms that are literally part of one larger space, such as a living/dining
combo.
Before you even walk into a paint
shop or start looking at samples online, take the time to map out how each room
interacts with the next. For example, a living/dining combo are two spaces that
work independently, but also together. You’ll definitely want to consider each
when you’re choosing colors, even if those colors aren’t exactly the same. For
example, you may want to paint your living area a light blue and your dining
area a light gray. Carefully chosen colors can harmonize together.
Rooms Behind Walls
What about the not so
obvious rooms in your home, such as the guest bedrooms, the bathrooms or the
utility room? Can they act independently since there’s a transition?
Yes, but mostly no.
As you move through one
space, say, that calm living/dining combo we painted in the section above, you
want to maintain a similar feel in the next space. So if your kitchen sits
behind the dining area, rather than painting orange, for example, look for a
color that harmonizes with the grays and blues. After all, you’re going to see
the colors of that kitchen from your dining room.
It may seem kind of silly
to worry about clashing colors that literally only overlap through a doorway,
but those colors are more than just colors. Those colors are attitudes, they’re
sensations, they’re hints at how rooms are meant to be used and what kind of
overall atmosphere you want your home to convey. When going through a room
transition makes it feel like you’ve stepped into a whole different house, you
need to address the biggest design element there: the paint.
Although contrasting colors
have their places and certainly can work in transitional spaces, you want to
maintain coordinated colors between rooms. To make that more clear, your first
goal is to choose the palette, and therefore atmosphere, that your whole home
should convey. That might be pastels or jewel tones or earth tones, or whatever
works for you, as long as it’s consistent. Your second goal is to apply those
colors in a way that maintains the emotional effect you have in mind.
Going back to that kitchen,
since our living room and dining were light gray and blue, you might consider a
light blue-gray, a light green, or even a light yellow, depending on the
palette you’re working with.
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