Archive for the ‘choosing paint colors’ Category

Exterior Color Inspiration!

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

C2 Paint's "Merlot", "Stout" and "Bluebeard" create an eye-catching exterior for this vision clinic!

Here’s a treat to be seen: a commercial building that is not BEIGE!!!
Kudos to Anne Viggiano Color Design & Consulting for this great color combination. By using a rich palette that is still muted, Anne has successfully taken the previous non-descript off-white exterior and added warmth, life and visual interest. All this from some buckets of paint.
As you can see, Anne knows that you can use color to direct the eye, add charater and emphasize architectural detail. Color is a tool that in the right hands can be utilized to feature positive aspects of a building, interior or exterior.
Paint is a inexpensive way to upgrade a building, there is no construction required. And if you are going to the effort of repainting anyways, why not use a skilled consultant to create the best outcome?
If you are interested in creating a fresh look with Anne, she is very tuned in to the C2 Paint palette and her masterful skills can help you go from blah to beautiful.
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Daly’s is Featured in Seattle Magazine with a Great Article on Using Color Consultants

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

One of the easiest ways to make economical changes in your home is through the artful use of color. Color can highlight architectural features making your home look its best,  and even camouflage areas you don’t want to draw attention to. But how do you go about finding the right colors to feature your home in its best possible light?

Maria Dolan from Seattle Magazine gives a great first-hand account of what it is like working with a color consultant. Here at Daly’s we have experienced color consultants who make house calls and help your feather your nest! It’s fun, low stress and helps you to see your home in a whole new way.

Here’s the article:

Rich colors from Portland’s Yolo Colorhouse

Rich colors (here from Portland’s Yolo Colorhouse) can work together with heavy trim Image Credit: Susan Seubert/ Courtesy Yolo Colorhouse

Color consultant Renate Ruby’s discerning eyes slid past the stripes of color I’d swiped onto the entry wall of my home—kaleidoscopic evidence, in hues ranging from eye-popping saffron yellow to mealy nonwhite, of nine months of color indecision. She patted the thick white trim framing my living room—the very thing I fell in love with when I first walked into our three-bedroom 1908 Ballard house—and told me its presence meant we could have fun with interior color. “You’re lucky,” she said. “You’ve got beefy transitions between rooms. This house has what I call a ‘pretty face.’” Like a starlet who never tires of praise, I soaked up the compliments to my house as if Ruby were actually speaking about my cheekbones.

Perhaps it’s the fact that a house feels so much like a part of ourselves that so many of us find choosing paint colors the most daunting of household chores. We want to feel good when we look in the mirror, and at our walls, and we want others to believe we’re neither trying too hard nor hopelessly out of date. Yet without an artistic eye and a strong understanding of the color wheel, most of us are doomed to live with our mediocre paint choices. (Or, if you’re like me, no choices, just months spent swiping sample pints of not-quite-right colors on the cheeks, er, walls.) That’s where good color consultants like Ruby come in. In 60 to 90 minutes (for $100 to $350 per hour), they can eyeball an interior, sniff out a client’s color comfort level, and choose the hues that would take weeks (ahem, maybe years) for most people to select on their own.

Robin Daly, interior designer and co-owner of Daly’s Paint and Decorating in Wallingford, says one reason it’s challenging for the layperson is that many paint colors for sale are simply ugly on any wall. “Some paint companies just do a buckshot approach,” says Daly. They offer 2,000 colors to give the illusion of choice, when only 100 of them actually work. Daly believes the best paint colors have multiple pigments, which cause the color to subtly shift as light changes throughout the day. Another challenge is that color is more than a visual experience. “Color affects you beyond what you see,” says Daly (as anyone slogging through a murky gray February Seattle day can attest). “As the light is hitting color, it’s affecting your body, because it’s hitting you with rays, even if you’re not looking at it.” Which is why you might find yourself calmer in a cool room, or revved up in spicy or red rooms. Sometimes really revved up. Daly says a woman at a color-consulting event spoke so enthusiastically about the earthy red paint she’d used in her bedroom that Daly impulsively asked her if she was having more sex as a result. The answer was an effusive “Yes!”

But back in my entry hall, I was more interested in welcoming guests than in front-door seduction. Ruby established my color comfort level on a scale of 1 to 10 (10 being a fearless color lover; I picked 7). She also explained that she would be choosing her colors from the palette of one paint brand, Authentic Home Color Paint, a line of 75 colors with an eco-friendly no-VOC (volatile organic compound) base developed by local interior designer and fellow color consultant Kathy Banak. Seventy-five sounded limiting to me, but after Daly’s tip about the glut of bad paint colors, I figured there was sense in winnowing to only the best.

Ruby said we should start by picking colors for “the room with the most constraints.” We moved into my kitchen, where the yellow and slate checkerboard linoleum, blue-green tiled backsplash, warm wood cabinetry and black stove make a wall color choice tricky. Ruby says how colors play off each other is probably the most important thing to consider when selecting them. “A lot of people make the mistake of choosing their favorite color, rather than considering how it will look in context,” she says. My kitchen’s range of tones is apparently unusual—many of the kitchens Ruby sees are designed within one tone, with counters, floor, cabinets and appliances blending together. In that situation she might select a color with more depth, perhaps using a very dark hue echoing the richest tone in the wood to “pop” the cabinets, or whatever the client chooses as the star of the room. “Start there and build around it,” she suggests.

I had originally shied away from adding a new color to this already busy room, intending to paint the walls white. But Ruby explained that many of the colors in my kitchen are “heavy,” and light walls would make it harder for the eye to differentiate between them. She pulled out a large persimmon red paint sample. It was the last color I would have chosen, but when she slapped it against the cabinets, I saw immediately how it enhanced the warm wood and complemented my lively floor. It was right for the space. From there, Ruby moved quickly to the dining room (for which she chose Storm Blue), the living room (where she played off the kitchen and dining room colors and my sage couch with Leaf), and the entry hall (Lemongrass). When she handed me the stack of swatches, the colors looked harmonious and not at all bland.

Those solid transitions she’d first noticed were part of what made mine a good house for using different colors in each room. By contrast, new homes often have curved rather than sharp lines, called “radius corners,” between rooms, which makes it hard to change paint colors from one space to the next. This is also sometimes true in 1920s houses with coved ceilings and archways. In that case, Ruby says, it’s best to use all one color, or tones of the same color.

Among my paint swatches were darker and lighter versions of a champagne color. The first was for my ceilings, and the second for trim throughout the house. Ruby explained that if my house had little or unattractive trim, she would have painted it closer to the color of the walls, to avoid drawing attention to it. If I felt like being a little more adventurous, Ruby also suggested I could try chocolate or charcoal for the trim, which would intensify my wall colors. Woody Allen, she noted, had used dark trim for many of his movies’ Manhattan interiors.

So with the right paint I could end up looking a little like Diane Keaton in Annie Hall?
Oh, right. We were talking about my house, not me.


Color Considerations

Choosing interior paint colors? Start at the top: Seattle color consultant Renate Ruby says ceilings should rarely be stark white, since it makes other colors look dingy. If your trim is white, the ceiling should be a slightly warmer white. Robin Daly of Wallingford’s Daly’s Paint and Decorating recommends home offices be painted in mid-value colors—not too light, not too dark. That will create less contrast—and lessen eyestrain—when your eye moves from the computer screen to the walls. Daly also says midcentury and newer homes with open floor plans are good places to play with accent or “feature” walls, where only one wall is painted a vibrant color.  “People are afraid of dark colors,” says local color consultant Kathy Banak. Especially in Seattle, many people assume that dark colors will make it hard to see in a room. But if you paint a room in mid-tones or darker, the light will land on the people and things in the room, rather than on the walls.

Color Consultation
Authentic Home Interior Design, Kathy Banak
Interior design and color consultation (and her own line of paint colors):
$350/hour (can create a palette for a 3,000-square-foot house in that time). 206.937.3070; authentic-home.com

Daly’s Paint and Decorating, several  consultants available, including Robin Daly
Color consultation: $100/hour.
800-735-7019; dalyspaint.com

Renate Ruby Design
Interior color consultation: $250/90 minutes. Exterior consultation: $250/first meeting, $125/additional hour. 206.499.6220; renateruby.com

Queen Anne and Magnolia
Paint and Interiors
Color consultation: $150/hour, $60/
additional hour. 206.283.0880; queen-annemagnoliapaintandinteriors.com

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We Love this Colorful Article from Seattle Homes & Lifestyles on a project from JAS Design/Build!

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

We don’t often get to see the finished results from the products we sell, so its quite a treat to see a large-scale project in it’s completed form. Here is a project that came from JAS Design/Buildusing paint from Daly’s that I am so excited to share with you:

http://www.seattlehomesmag.com/article/place-gather

We love the use of color on the cabinets -  a visual treat that clearly demonstrtates that white is not the only painted cabinet option. Kudos to JAS Design/Build and to Seattle Homes & Lifestyles for a lovely article!!

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Daly’s Paint and Pratt & Lambert – A Colorful Connection!

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010
I want to share with you an article that just appeared in Pratt & Lambert’s Personal Expressions magazine. Featured is our NEW Bellevue Daly’s store – we are so proud of it, and very pleased that P&L thought it looked good enough to put in their national publication.
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Tips and Tricks – The Best Way to Choose Interior Paint Colors

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Finding the right color can be tricky, and for reasons that aren’t quite obvious at first. Your trip to the paint store will be much easier if you keep a few things in mind:

Most paint chips aren’t made from paint. Shocking, isn’t it? With the exception of C2 Paint, most national brands have their chips printed with ink – and ink is a transparent medium while paint is an opaque one, and light interacts differently with these two mediums. Therefore it is almost impossible to replicate the color on the sample chip to the color that comes from the can. If you have ever wondered why the color on the chip didn’t match the color on the wall, now you know.

Color chips have another disadvantage – they are small. When you look at the size of even a single wall, you quickly realize that a paint chip is too small to accurately give you an impression of how the color will play in a full-scale setting. If you understand that color chips are very handy tools to take you to the next step, they can be very useful. Color chips provide a very quick method for winnowing out the obviously wrong colors and finding those three or four colors that might work. Your next step is to sample the actual color.

Before we roll on some color, let’s look at one more issue: Lighting. If you are trying to make a color choice while standing in a busy paint store or staring at some samples on a computer screen, you are at another disadvantage because you are not looking at your color under the correct lighting conditions.

Preferably, you want to see what happens to your paint color in a series of lighting situations – morning, noon and evening. Each of these different times of day affects the way the color reads, and you want to make sure you like it at all times. Sometimes a color will ‘mud out’ at night (we can spend a lot of time discussing tinting recipes and why this happens… but later), or intensify to the point of looking neon, or wash out and look almost white when you thought it would be a soft taupe, or you find that charming coffeehouse color looks heavy and sluggish. Color does not always do what you expect it to. And if you live in a grove of trees or near the water, testing becomes imperative.

Ideally, you want to try your color with the other design elements that are going into the space like sofas, rugs, art, etc… C2’s Ultimate Paint Chip, which is a poster-sized chip made from real paint, is one option if you aren’t ready to get paint on the walls, or you can try a 16 oz. Sampler or Test Quart of paint (depending upon the brand you are using). Paint AT LEAST an 18’ x 24’ patch on the wall. More if you can. Apply the color on the darkest wall, the lightest (usually opposite a window), and in a corner. This allows you to see your color in all room and lighting situations.

Another major benefit of testing your color – it keeps those unfortunate color mistakes from becoming landfill. And we can all feel good about that!

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What Makes a Color Work?

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Yesterday I met with a color specifier at the (soon to be old) Bellevue store. She was thrilled to learn about our different paint lines and she made a comment that got me to thinking…

She wanted to know MORE about what makes certain colors our ‘go-to’ colors in the palette. In other words, when we help someone choose colors, we often start off with our favorite shades to help facilitate the process of winnowing down the choices.

But what makes them our favorites, and why do they work?

It’s more than a lucky guess, of course. As I am writing this, I keep flashing to C2 Paint’s “Labrador”. It’s yellow. But it’s not yellowy-yellow because it possesses a red undertone.

This hint of red pigment keeps the yellow from going too acidic, plus it contributes to uniting the color to other shades, ensuring that ‘Labrador’ will coordinate with a large variety of hues. And interestingly enough, ‘Labrador’ is ideal both as an exterior yellow (imagine a yellow farmhouse on the middle of the country with tons of crisp white trim and a deep green or rich red front door) and it plays exceptionally well as a kitchen yellow. Very unusual thaqt a single color can span both directions, when you think about the way a color reads outside compared to inside.

Yet, if you look at it in relation to the color chip rack or fan deck, you might think it’s too peachy at first. But get it off the rack, and the color really starts to shine. Of course, there are other great yellows, too! Some of my favorites include: C2 ‘Moxie’, ‘Polenta‘, ‘Shine’ and ‘Sugar Cookie’ when you want that pretty pale hue.

When looking at any color, don’t forget to try the color in the environment it will be used – ultimately, it’s the relationship of your new color with all the other factors that make it work.

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Speaking of Color: Men Drawn to Women in Red | Science Blog

Thursday, October 30th, 2008


Color perception is an interesting thing. The fact that a simple color can change your perception of someone without being conciously aware of the fact – interesting. I know that red rooms affect you, too. Red walls encourage more alchohol to be consumed, and time passes faster. That’s why red dining rooms are not only lovely to look at, but great for entertaining and encourages guests to linger over dessert.

I suppose if you are looking for a mate (or just a hot date) this information below can come in handy. I’m not saying that the idea of manipulating a man is somthing that should be encouraged… but if the red dress fits, wear it!

Men drawn to women in red Science Blog
http://www.scienceblog.com/cms/men-drawn-women-red-17674.html