~Images: Courtesy of Tom Scheerer
Friday, July 31, 2009
Design Crush: Tom Scheerer
~Images: Courtesy of Tom Scheerer
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Interview with Colour Expert; Joanne Day
10 years ago when I started my design business I placed an ad in the Yellow Pages that included the words “Expert Colour Consultation”. Then as I looked at those words I thought, ‘I better become an expert’, and that is when I found Joanne Day at The Daystudio in San Francisco.
Joanne Day has trained many colour consultants, designers and faux finishers all over the world and it was her colour course that inspired the years of colour training that followed, in addition to discovering that it was going to be my niche in Interior Design. I am honoured and delighted that she agreed to be interviewed on my blog!
Sidenote: I took the liberty of adding photos to make this post more colourful!
[MK] What’s your favourite colour? What colour would you like to see banished from all paint decks?
[JD] Before I was so involved in color I used to think color choice was infinite – it was too many choices. Which blue was the right blue? Now I visualize color as only 6 choices, ROY G BP. Each parent color with all its derivative color children being enclosed inside a back yard fence and on the other side of the fence is another parent color backyard and all their children. It makes choosing combinations of colors much easier. I always like to add blue as an accent. It is interesting to follow trends and favorite colors and the psychology behind them. Trends are often unconscious reflections of what is coming into everyone’s consciousness. 10 years ago when green came in like gangbusters we were starting to individually perceive Nature, ecology and the food chain, how trees take in our CO2 and we take in their oxygen. Now we perceive that behind green (which is considered a neutral now) is blue, water, and how important it is. These show up as color trends and changing favorites.
Banish the white strips between colors on a chip deck, they keep you from seeing the difference between adjacent colors. Place your finger over it and the brain thinks they are connected and can see the subtle differences between them. And banish the distracting black lettering too (put it on the back as they do in Europe). Letters and lines put us in the analytical left brain and overpowers the intuitive/visual/feeling right brain where color is decided.
[MK] What was your biggest colour/design mistake?
[JD] A warm/cool mistake. Today we often use multiple fabrics, carpet, old and new furnishings in one room, and several paint colors. When we choose a room color we need to bridge those many existing colors. The more objects and colors in a room the more difficult it can be to make sure everyone is sharing something in common and when a color doesn’t, it shifts cooler or warmer than the rest and sticks out like a sore thumb. A good colorist chooses colors that won’t make the client have to change everything in the room.
[MK] What is the most important colour lesson you’ve learned?
[JD] The quickest way to change your life is a coat of paint. We all go through transitions and color helps us get there faster.
And there is no wrong color, only wrong color combinations.
[MK] When it comes to colour, what’s hot? Which one do you think is timeless and which colour trend would you love to see disappear?
[JD] Chameleon colors are hot. Chosen because they take advantage of natural and artificial light-shift and morph a color into different hues at different times. Without light there is no color, they go hand in hand. Colors that take advantage of changing light are timeless, they enchant us. It’s kind of like getting three colors for the price of one, a bargain. Google Luis Barragán, an architect who decades ago started adding color pigments on a large scale to exterior stucco taking advantage of and playing with light in locations all over the world.
I still see that awful dusty blue and pink on kitchenware and wall art, someone must still be buying it, but I would love to see it disappear for at least the rest of my lifetime.
[MK] What do you think is one of the biggest mistakes homeowners make with colour?
[JD] Following a trend that doesn’t agree with a clients genetically hardwired color bias. When a perfect color outfit makes you feel beautiful, it empowers you. It follows that the colors in your home should be chosen in a similar way.
[MK]How do you get clients to take a confident leap into color?
[JD] I’ve learned that patches on a wall don’t help the client. They are still just as confused and unsure. So I paint a cardboard file box the color I recommend and put it somewhere in the room. Let them move it around for a few days. A 3D object will test the color in all light situations unlike a 2D patch on a wall. It will get a definitive yes or no. I also hold the box top under the clients chin, if she or he can’t wear it with their coloring, the environment will not empower them. It’s a no.
[MK] What are the 5 things in life you cannot live without?
1. [JD] Beauty, because it inspires us and sometimes brings us to our knees.
2. Nature, because it is our mother, it rejuvenates us, it soothes us, it supports us.
3. Friends, because they make the uncertainties of this world less scary. Friends are members of a tribe that share common interests. Like color combinations that share a common pigment ingredient are harmonious and embrace each other. Colors that don’t, push away from each other.
4. Doing Art, because it calms and balances my life, and of course, art is about color.
It’s kind of like yoga, you do art and art does you. Some people garden, some play music or dance to get into the “zone”. It’s a right brain (visual-emotional) activity that balances out a very left brain (analytical) world. So is color. That is why recessions bring out brighter colors, to balance our uncertainty.
5. Teaching/Consulting, because it’s a way of sharing what I love most, it gives people a tool and a skill that changes lives.
Related posts:
Interview with Colour Expert; Kate Smith
Interview with Colour Expert; Janice Lindsay (Washington Post Blog Watch, July 9)
Happy Birthday Tyler!
I Have Got To Get An iPhone!
There is also an app for interior designers (or wannabes) called "Mark on Call" which was created by L.A. based interior designer Mark Lewison. With this application, you can layout a room (to scale) then put down flooring, add architectural details and try out various furniture and appliances in the space you have created. Furthermore, you can add color, fabric, wood or stone from your own library or the applications preset options. Check out this full tutorial on You Tube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vn51PgJYO0E. Super cool! I will put this into the category "why didn't I think of that?"
Oh, and the irony is that I splurged for the Treo so that I could have a camera on my phone to take pictures while I was out on shopping excursions! I am so three years ago.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
An Orange Tablescape Thursday – Inside and Out!
Okay, I have been reluctant to show you anything inside my house because I rent (and for starters the walls are a very pale pinky beige—yuk—anyone who reads this blog knows how much I dislike that colour) but to paint it, I would have to include a very large textured ceiling in the living room so I haven’t done it yet. It is the most adorable 50’s style house with huge, bay windows in the living room and all around to show off the view of the city and the beautiful gardens surrounding the house! I would love to buy it and completely renovate (on my list for next year’s goals) but until that happens, I have to live with some things. . .
It was my good friend Tami Rode’s birthday last week so she was over for brunch on the weekend, and I thought this would be the perfect opportunity for my first Tablescape Thursday Post, hosted by Between Naps on the Porch! My dining table has 2 different alternating styles of Queen Anne chairs (4 in total), the one on the left is from William Switzer, and the one on the right is from a garage sale years ago (the pair) for $14 dollars I repainted in cream and re-covered them in the textured leaf fabric. What I really want now is a Saarinen table and I’m still debating if I should keep the chairs, paint them all the same colour (something fun) and re-cover them. The placemats from HomeSense were $3 dollars, they only had 3 which is why they were such a good price but I loved the colours so I thought I’d use them when it’s dinner for 3! I’ve had these little frog place card holders forever and I just love how playful they are, I use them a lot in the summer. This is Tami’s up close. I also have a million colour chips lying around my home office so I thought I’d pick a colour that was somewhere close to the placemats!
You can see the rounded bay windows of the house through the 2 front bushes, I decided to pick some orchids (I think that’s what they are) for the centerpiece (below). I’ll show you what the house looks like soon.
Then I thought it needed some green in the arrangement (okay don’t judge me too harshly it’s not an Eddie Ross arrangement :) so I went around to the back garden to clip some.
Here you can see the dining room through the back window and also see that this house is full of windows. When it snows it feels like I live in a snow globe! Really it does, here is the view from the side of the house (above).
Test question for anyone that’s been paying attention? Ideally what colour trim should a white house have (not the gray shown above)?
To the left is a view that includes downtown Vancouver, but I don’t have a picture of it here! This is what I get to look at every day from my living room, I get happy just walking into it every day! This is the herb garden on the steps leading to the upper garden in the back, really private and beautiful with more hedges. Old though – would need a new retaining wall in a reno, that’s for sure!
Vancouver had a huge thunderstorm last Saturday night, the entire living room was orange from the lights of the storm, it was quite fun to watch! (See the textured ceiling? *sigh*) Here’s an official photo of the storm:
Before I started decorating for a living, I would spend the entire day decorating a table for a dinner party, now my guests are lucky if they get a napkin!! I’m sure there are others that can relate to this phenomenon!
There are so many beautiful tablescapes waiting at Between Naps on the Porch – go take a look!
Related posts:
Feelin' Blue
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Put Away Your Labelmaker!
Chalkboard Tags
Colored Coordinated Luggage Tags
Personalized Silhouette on Wood Discs
Painted Wood Letters For Each Family Member
The only time to use a Personal Colour Viewer
Last week I was in Victoria and had dinner with my friend Kim (who I have not seen for 7 years, she was in Miami but she’s back) at the Brentwood Bay Lodge & Spa. So stunning! The whole hotel was varying shades of natural cedar accented with black.
Photos by Maria Killam Colour & Design
Now until this point; anytime I have seen an exterior with stained cedar siding or shingles and people have used black on the fascia, windows, on the stucco, etc. I look at it and think—that is so wrong. Just to be clear I'm talking about an all cedar house with black trim.
A natural ‘whistler cabin’ look like that with a modern accent black, in my world the combination does not work! Until I saw it so tastefully done in this hotel and I figured out why it works so well. . .
The entrance to the marina, (photo taken from the patio):
Pots filled with grass – so organic and fresh looking!
A side view of the patio:
Here’s my mojito; I really took this picture to show you the patio chairs, so comfortable!
And here’s Kimberly and I about to order dinner!
Notice how the fascia is not black, and the balcony looks like it was left the cement colour. If the balcony and fascia were black, it would be too heavy and (in my opinion) would kill the natural, organic feeling of this setting. Using black strictly as an accent instead of in a heavy handed way, keeps the look sophisticated, exclusive and serene! On any other exterior, it would be weird not to repeat the black on the fascia, but with an all cedar exterior, it's very well done just the way it is.
Above photo obviously not taken by me
This brings me to my point; the ONLY time it works to use a tool like a Personal Colour Viewer with Benjamin Moore is if you are trying out dramatic combinations using black trim (for example) otherwise, there is no way that a computer generated paint sample on an exterior photo of your home, will give you an accurate impression of what the colour will look like, when the light hits it during varying times of the day.
If you need exterior colour advice for ANY other reason, hire a professional.
Related posts:
5 Steps to choosing the Right Exterior Colours
The Best Exterior Trim Colours—NOT Cloud White
Advice to Do it Yourself Homeowners on Choosing Exterior Colour