honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, January 25, 2002

Right colors can change how you look at your home

By Samantha Critchell
Associated Press

White is light; color is bright.

In home decorating, white is the standard. It's easy, it looks clean and neat, it goes with everything. But, says interior design writer Anna Kasabian, before long, you have too much of a good thing.

White should be warm and used almost like cloud puffs to lighten a room but overuse can come off as cold or harsh.

Kasabian, author of "The New Home Color Book" (Rockport), says colors — even bold colors such as red and purple — have a place in homes. Colors can help define space, define the activities that occur there and define the feeling one wishes to convey.

"If you respond to a color personally, you should experiment with it in your home," Kasabian says.

Bright colors can be mood-lifters, she adds. Even the smallest of spaces, such as the entryway of a tiny apartment, can get the color treatment.

Paint a small entry a tomato red and scatter shallow white shelves on the wall to display your prized pottery and trinkets," she suggests. "You will forget the size of the space because of its depth and character ... and because you love it."

For those wary of splashing a lot of color throughout the house, an ideal place for an "introduction" is the kitchen, says Annie Sloan, the author of several books on color and interior painting, including the upcoming "Annie Sloan's Color Schemes for Every Room" (Laurel Glen).

"There's nothing better than color in the kitchen where there always seems to be a lot of white — white appliances, a lot of lights," says Sloan, who lives in England.

Experiment with a bright color on one wall and see if you like it, Sloan says. Build from there.

A trick that Sloan uses to make sure a room remains balanced is to close her eyes halfway, enough to filter the colors but she can still differentiate light and dark. If one overpowers the other, she knows it's time to add or subtract color.

Another entree into the world of color that Sloan suggests is bright yellow. "The color disappears at night," she says, making it ideal for a formal dining room that is bright and cheerful during the day but can bask in the glow of candles at night.

While Sloan is a fan of color (the stairwell in her home is painted red), she says there's no need to go to the extreme of color decorating.

Sloan's advice: Blend. Coordinate. Mix it up.

She suggests combining green and red, purple and yellow, and blue and orange.