Choosing Paint Colours For Your Walls The Proper Way
Choosing paint colours for our walls is often an overwhelming task.
How to choose paint colours, however, is not, and should not, be a complicated and stressful process.
There are a few important aspects to consider when choosing the appropriate colours for our walls.
Unfortunately, we often don’t consider the importance of our surroundings and how they affect our state of mind.
A properly tidied-up, decorated and painted room can have a huge impact on our senses and how we feel, helping us support the achievement of our goals and resolutions.
Researchers have concluded that approximately “80% of human experiences are filtered through the eyes”.
Can you imagine the effect colours have in our lives?
Our home and office walls make a huge difference in how we perceive the space.
We paint walls of different colours for different reasons;
We choose some colours to identify a space with a specific function or a specific state of mind we want to achieve, and, (I can’t believe I am saying this), there is no bad or good colour; there is a proper application for every colour. The trick is being able to identify the user’s needs for the space and associate the right colour to it.
Once the colour is selected, it’s critical to determine the suitable sheen of paint for the walls.
Sheens are mostly selected based on their use, (whether we are painting a wall, a door, a trim or a ceiling).
However, sheens are often selected for practical reasons, like their scrub-ability and cleanability based on the painting particular location, (a busy restaurant walkway, a home main entrance, a humid bathroom and kitchen, etc.).
It’s also wise to determine which sheen is most suitable for the tone of colour selected, and the effect we want to achieve in one particular space.
Let’s get into the details!
paint colour selection
Choosing paint colours doesn’t have to be stressful!
I can’t recommend you go with the trends, as they are exactly what they are; trends.
Trendy colours will be gone within two to three years, so you should stay away from them unless you don’t mind re-painting your walls every few years.
I even listened to a podcast the other day saying that grey is dead and white is an absolute no-no. I tend to disagree with this as I find both colours being so beautiful, neutral and timeless in many of their tones.
In my opinion, the most important elements to consider when you are choosing paint colours, are:
- Do I want the whole house consistently painted with the same colour throughout, or do I want every room of a different colour? This will help you determine how many colours you need to select. One colour plus accents, or several different colours?
- Who is using the room that is going to be painted? This will help you determine the personality of the room and support you in choosing the right colour.
- What is the function of the room? This will help you determine the state of mind for the room and the practicality of the room.
- Is your room colour more important to you than your possessions colours, materials and patterns? This will determine if you are choosing a colour to go with your possessions, (i.e. a particular family painting, a heavily textured couch or an antique vase, or a deep blue bowl you bought at a market on your trip to Turkey), or if your possessions can be distributed elsewhere throughout the house because the colour you want to paint your walls is more important to the mood and feel of the room.
For example; Let’s pretend you are married and have two young children. You have three bedrooms, (your master suite, and the children’s rooms), and a home office on the main living area, (let’s keep the basement and its spare room for another time).
You determine you want your house painted with one main colour and that some selected rooms will have a different colour to define the space differently.
Let’s say, you want your whole house walls to be off-white, and the bedrooms and home office rooms to be different.
The first course of action is to choose your main colour.
There are a million of off-whites on the market; do you want a colder or warmer tone of off-white?
That depends on your personality, taste and especially on the flooring you have!!
Warm off-whites have tones of yellow or pink, while cold off-white have tones of green or blue.
I recommend the warmer tones as the new energy efficient light bulbs tend to have a cold white tone to it, (you can select warm white tones too, but that’s an entire different conversation).
A cold off-white may also be exaggerated by your geographical environment, if you leave in a place with a lot of clouds and snow.
A cold off-white can also reflect light differently depending if the room you are painting is facing North or South.
On a North room walls, the cold off-white becomes even colder, giving you an 80s dentist office effect, and who wants that???
A warm off-white has a more welcoming and soothing effect on the users.
Once you’ve chosen your main colour, you are ready to choose your bedrooms and home office colours. While these are different rooms, it is still important that colours selected for these rooms blend well with your main colour!
The bedrooms rule of thumb is to pick calming colors as these are quiet, and soothing rooms where you decompress before going to sleep!
However, if you have kids and they are at an age they want to choose their own colours, they may go for something completely bold to personalize their space, and that’s ok!
It’s a good way for you to experiment with colours in a confined room, and it’s a good way for your kids to feel proud of their choice!
Your home office walls colour should reflect the personality and the needs of the person using it, YOU!
In this space colours can be both vibrant and energetic, as well as calming, and soothing.
It really depends on how you work.
Some people need vibrant and energetic stimulation to work, and want to surround themselves with bright and bold colours, others prefer the neutral zone…
You know how you work and what allows you to focus the most.
However, if your home office does not have a window, or only has a small window, then your choice of colour needs to be more selective.
Avoid dark colours at any cost!!
The darker the colour, the darker the room.
The darker the colour, the smaller the room.
Then you have to deal with more artificial light that can cause headaches and eyes fatigue…
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paint finish selection
Choosing paint colours is not the only thing you need to do.
Selecting the proper sheen is critical for the look of your walls, light reflection and walls maintenance.
Sheens or finishes selection, is as equally as important as colour selection.
Generally, these paint sheens rules apply:
- Ceilings, (unless they are stippled): Flat
- Walls: Eggshell or SatinDoors and Trims in residential application: Silk or Pearl
- Doors and Trims in commercial applications: Semi-gloss
However, I strongly recommend you increase the sheen for your walls to a Velvet finish.
It is slightly shinier than Eggshell but it allows for brighter walls as it reflects more light.
Another plus is its maintenance. A velvet sheen is hardier than eggshell and easier to wipe clean without scuffing the walls, which, with young children is critical!
Picture orange Cheetos little fingers all over your walls, at the birthday party you are hosting for your 2 years old…You either ban the Cheetos from your pantry, and just serve veggie straws or, you paint your walls pure white in a Velvet sheen and buy the Costco size Magic Eraser box…
Warning: only use Magic Eraser on pure white walls, or it will take your colour off the wall!!!
Jokes aside, these are really the fundamental aspects of how to choose paint colours for your walls.
I hope you find this article on choosing paint colours helpful!
Feel free to ask me any question you should have.
I’ll be glad to get back to you as soon as possible!
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