Thursday, February 26, 2009

Vancouver's Colour Expert reveals the Insider Secrets to Testing & Selecting Paint Colours

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I arrived at a colour consultation yesterday and my lovely client Deborah agreed to let me photograph the consultation for my blog. She needed a colour for her living room. A new colour to freshen it up, she liked this one but knew it wasn’t right.

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You can see the existing yellow shade was looking a bit green next to her sofa and drapery which were more of a goldy beige.

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The reason I took out my fan deck to match the existing colour was because she didn’t want to re-paint her entry (which was the same colour as the living room) because that colour continues back into the kitchen which she will be renovating. I had to make sure the new colour worked well with the one we were keeping.

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I have approximately 50 – 75 larger painted samples [above]. The best colour training I had in the beginning of my career—many years ago--was with the Daystudio in San Francisco. Joanne [Day] said, every time she picks colour for anyone’s house (and she’s been doing this for 35 years), she comes back with a 5 ft by 5 ft painted board [for each room], and tells the client to look at it in the morning, at noon and at night. Why? The light will dramatically alter the colour throughout the day. And if you are mostly in that room in the evening and you hate the colour then, you might need a different one.

This is why I have always used 11 x 17 samples when I conduct consultations because there are many times, when I have picked the colour I thought was right from my architectural kit, (and they are approx. 2” x 6”) and then when I have held up the bigger sample, it was SO WRONG. Not using big samples like this would be mostly hit and miss, because we as designers can guide the client to picking the right colour. . . but first, we need to be able to see the undertone with all the existing finishes in the house, and second, they need to see what a bigger sample looks like because I can’t predict whether my client will like the colour once it’s painted on a bigger sample.

So back to the colour consultion:

imageIf there is an existing colour on the walls you must look at the new colour with a white background. Otherwise, you will visually be comparing the new colour to the old one and that will influence your colour choices. We propped 3 samples up on the sofa (from left to right): HC-28 Shelbourne Buff, HC-34 Wilmington Tan, and HC-38 Decatur Buff. All of them were close but HC-34 looked like it was the best one.

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Then we found some lighter ones, and propped those up as well (along with the Wilmington Tan which was the winner out of the above 3). The above two (from left to right) were HC-35 Powell Buff and HC-26 Monroe Bisque. Here the Powell Buff was the right choice because (compared to the sofa) it had a little more orange in it (compared to the Monroe Bisque which looked green). And actually in the image above, you can see what I’m talking about.

Before you go running off to see the ‘orange’ or ‘green’ in either one, you need to understand something about beige. One beige colour will have more than one undertone depending on which beige you are comparing it to. I’ll explain this in another post—this one would get too long.

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With our choices narrowed down to HC-35 Powell Buff and HC-34 Wilmington Tan, we walked over to hold them up next to the drapes. We didn’t like the Wilmington Tan anymore because it looked too green next to the drapes (which you can see in the photo). Here you can also see that the Powell Buff is slightly darker than the Vichyssoise but it has more orange in it (with yellow, remember it’s always either more green or more orange depending on which way it’s moving on the colour wheel).

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Then we held it up next to the fireplace stone and you can see here that the Wilmington Tan brings out the warmer gold tones in the stone. We briefly considered painting this wall the Tan (it was opposite the drapery) but decided against it because (I should have taken another photo here) there wasn’t enough wall space to have it work as an accent wall. The colour would get too choppy next to the built-in shelving on either side, etc.

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Then we held our chosen colour right beside the carpet. Here you can see that her carpeting is a pinky beige but she will eventually be installing hardwood flooring so we are ignoring the carpet. Even if she wasn’t changing the carpet, we would ignore it because there is nothing in her furniture that is even remotely pinky beige. A colour professional must know which elements of a room must be ignored and which you should work with to get the colour right!!

By the way, if you had art in the room, you would do the same thing. . . hold the samples up behind the frame to see how they look with the colours in the artwork.

Next she asked me about trim colour because all of it needed to be re-painted.

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As we stood there looking at her dining room (which is 2166-30 Bronze Tone) Deborah noted that the trim looked very stark next to the rich orange colour in the room. I agreed and we selected a warmer/creamier colour OC-38 Acadia White (which incidentally is the same colour as OC-130 Ivory White). In the image below, you can see that the creamier white would look much better with the rich wall colour. I could have chosen an even creamier trim colour had all the colours in the house been as rich and dark as this one but since we were pairing it with the lighter shade we had selected for the living room, we had to strike a balance. By the way, the existing white was CC-20 Decorators white which next to CC-10 Ultra White is the whitest white they have. When you are looking at white, make sure you compare it to the whitest white in the deck, otherwise there’s no way you can see the undertones in it.

By the way, notice the flow that has been created here? She has orange toss cushions in her living room and we have pulled the gold into her dining room with the drapery. That's how you start with flow. You don't just pull an orange from the sky if that's what you want your dining room painted in. You pick the 'accent colour' that is in your living room.

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A word about testing paint colours: This is what NOT to do. When you stick a bunch of painted samples up together on the middle of the wall (or worse paint them directly on the wall) you are now visually comparing them to each colour. I hear people say, “well I like that one because it’s warmer (like in the example below, the blues on the bottom look warmer than the top row because there’s more purple in them).” That doesn’ t necessarily mean it’s the right colour. Technically, you can’t even call a colour cool or warm unless you are comparing it to a ‘warmer colour’, or a ‘cooler colour’. When people say, “that’s a cold colour’, its usually because they are not seeing it in the context of the space.

Test swatches of paint by bbmowery.

In a colour consultation (when I was new) I had a client show me the tiniest little baby 1” x 1” stain samples on a brochure and ask me which one I would recommend for their hardwood floors? In that moment I thought ”Well I’m the designer, I should know shouldn’t I?” I left and called a designer friend of mine who said, “Tell them to get their hardwood floor people to paint up some bigger samples and that’s how they will know!”

I tell you this story because here I am, someone that understands that wall colours cannot be chosen from tiny baby samples on a fan deck, and I still got caught up in “I should know right?” in that moment. However, why would a stain colour be any different? Because it’s not!

See the colours on the pillars below? Now that is the size your samples should technically be. Especially when you are picking exterior colour for your house!

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Bottom line: Testing is very important. Perhaps you can begin to understand also why a colour consultation (that was just one room) takes longer than 10 minutes. I have been doing this for so long I can pretty much narrow down the colour the minute I walk into a space. When I whip it out that fast, the client is thinking Why is it that one? Why not the other 2000 colours in your kit?”. So part of the process is showing them the pink undertones or the green undertones or other colour possibilities so they can begin to understand why the one I have chosen is the right one. By ‘the right one’ I mean when working with existing furniture and furnishings, obviously if the space is empty that’s a whole other conversation, for another post.

That’s part of what the client is paying for when they hire a professional. People want to know why the colour they have chosen is the right one or why it doesn’t work. The cost of hiring a professional gets very small when the right colours are chosen in the first place because it costs the same to paint the wrong colour as it does to paint the right one.

Related posts:

What Everyone Should Know about Beige

What’s an Undertone?

Clean vs. Dirty Colours

Colour is Context

The Right way to Create Flow using Colour

The first Mistake a New Colour Consultant will make Every Time

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