Decorating 101: Do It Yourself or Hire a Pro?

As soon as you’ve decided what you want your home to look like, the next question comes as this one: should you take on the design and decorative decisions all by yourself or maybe, just maybe, you should hire a professional for that matter? Or perhaps both? Interior decorators and designers as we know them today barely existed even as recent as 50 years…

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.

Tips on Picking a Color for Your Walls

What’s the real psychological or aesthetic reason about people perceiving one place visually appealing and the other one repulsive? Why are we attracted to some specific products over other? In our designers’ opinion, it’s all a color’s fault. Color—whether architectural or in the branded packaging—estimates for around 60 percent of our response to any object or any place.

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.

The 3 Principles of Interior Design

A skillfully decorated interior not only offers functional advantages, but it also creates a mood or a feeling. On top of all that, an interior design made in deep cooperation with the client showcases the personality of the family that lives there. Only a thorough attention to all these 3 pinnacles  — function, mood and personality — will ensure a decorating success!

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

 

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.

Top 7 Interior Design Styles

Did you ever hear about the Colonial Office Design style? Usually classic Colonial design is a mixture of Georgian, French and Spanish Colonial style. Interiors, when designed according to this stylebook tend to look formal and symmetrical, but with some unorthodox architecture found throughout too…

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.

Design Ideas: Midcentury Modern Design

Are you looking for ideas on a new design? Maybe you are also a fan of a smooth, old-school design pattern? Midcentury may just be ideal for you! Its homes that became popular in the 1950s and 1960s are all about highlighting the simplicity and light. Clean, geometric lines and large windows are common features found in this modest design.

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.

Design Ideas: Southwestern Kitchen Design

www.templatemonster.com

This style of an interior (and sometines exterior) design is mostly popular in the southern states. It is distinctively known for making a home decorated in a Southwestern style having  a casual and warm look. Terra-cotta tile floors, rustic wooden ceiling beams and rough textures are design details that give these homes a uniquely cozy and old-school feel.

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

 

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.

Design Ideas: Farmhouse Kitchen Design

Are you a fan of a rustic style in design? Then this farmhouse-inspired visual aesthetic will be your cup of tea! Ergonomic, practical and informal it has a heavy focus put on comfort and timeworn finishes. Wide-plank flooring and elements of nature that trigger charm can be  easily found throughout the variety of the farmhouse interiors.

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.

 

California Law: License to Practice Interior Design?

In March 2013, Californian legislator Piona Ma introduced a bill (AB 3423) that would require a special new licensing in order to be practicing a “registered interior design.” The bill currently awaits an April committee hearing and would become part of the California codes only if it passes both legislative houses and gets the governor’s approval. As you might predict now, the pending legislation is getting a lot of talking among our colleagues.

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.

10 Things Decorators Want You to Know About What They Do

All of our interior designers are known for their long-time experience of work in the industry, including working at our company for years!

Are you curious about how exactly is the decorator’s work schedule built up? Ever wonder what you’re paying those fees for, what they do all day or how they come up with fresh ideas? To satisfy your interest we decided to invite three professional interior decorators for an interview. We’ll ask them about how they feel about their work, how they…

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

 

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.

How to Work With an Interior Designer

A common perception about the main things in an interior designer’s working day is that the visual aesthetics is more important than anything else. E.g. wall colors, window treatments, pillows color scheme. But in reality, all this visual stuff is just a tip of the iceberg. In fact, a professional designer can add to a home much more than just the aesthetics…

This whole thing of assessing the impact of any given color is usually called “color psychology.” But the very effect that the color scheme color has at different stages of either design or anything else is significant: its physical and psychological. Color use is not something that brings definitive equality between “color and our moods,” as is a currently popular expression. The truth is that wherever we are we respond to certain colors in certain ways. So its quite foolish ti overlook the importance of color. Color use is crucial, whether in our homes or in the places where we work.

Start Small

If you’re not quite confident yet about the color you’re choosing  try to experiment in a powder room or bathroom, or basically any small hall or area between rooms. Also trying it at an accent wall may be a good idea. If you’re painting on your own, pick an area that’s quick to finish. That way you’ll be able to see your results faster, and be happy with it or change it. Look at the process as a fun experiment.

To make a start, select a favorite color drawn from an artwork, a rug, dishes and an accessory or furniture piece as a main color or accent.

Think About Your Mood

When you’re choosing a color, weigh in on the mood of a room. For example, think of what do you want your bedroom to be like – relaxing or intimate? Each of these 2 sides of mood specter has a color palette representatives of their own. Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a smoother feeling while stronger colors are for creating drama.

Do you want your kitchen and dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or be formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and bolder colors add to a sociable atmosphere; darker blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal feel.

Also think, that what you want your kid’s rooms to be needs to go with certain colors too. In order to create an active and exciting energy or a strict and restful feeling see the color palette below. Be careful not to hyper-activate your children with hues that are too bright or intense. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can cause unrest and irritability.

Pay Attention to Lighting

Did you ever wonder why do the paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips? In fact, there a lot of just reasons, that highlight how the lighting and the color scheme go together and influence one another:

Natural daylight shows the color in its original quality;

Bright lighting brings out warmer tones and more shades of yellow;

Fluorescent lighting casts a more blue-ish tone.

All this means is that a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a set of windows. So it might be effective to use such color schemes as an accent wall, which is not exposed to a direct sunlight all the time.

Learn the Color Terms

On top of that, this whole “color scheme” science actually have an expanded terminology of its own!

Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.

The value of the hue depends on how light or dark it looks to be.

Saturation means just how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue starts to appear less dominant.

Intensity is the brightness of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A color that’s more intense usually has a more dominant hue.

If you want a more active space, consider using stronger, more intense hues. Even in case you want a light-colored room, pick colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or the light ones. Overly-light colors can feel too bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, similarly pastel colors can create a better luminous effect when used in the same room.

Test Your Color Choice

Confirm your choice of a color by testing how do they look when painted on a poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to get out of your visual comfort zone. When doing this whole testing, we’d recommend you try strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. As a counter-option, you can go for a more dramatic effect with a stronger color on the ceiling.

Tinted ceilings can seriously change the whole look of a room.