Showing posts with label green silk wallpaper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green silk wallpaper. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Do's and Don'ts of Decorating With Green




Green is a color with many personalities. Unlike most colors, green can be warm or cool, depending on its components. Yellow-greens are warm colors and full of energy. Gray-greens or blue greens are more relaxed and subdued. Successfully decorating with green can simply mean finding the perfect green for your home. 

DO ignore the outdated advice that green should not be used for dining rooms or kitchens. The right green can balance out the warm woods of most cabinets and dining room furniture. A minty green looks wonderful with white cabinets.

DON'T ignore the undertones of any green you’re considering. Many color schemes have been derailed by a too-blue green, when what was really called for was a yellow-green. Green can have blue or yellow undertones, and the difference is substantial when matching colors. Color names can often give clues as to the temperature of a color.

DO look beyond sage green when looking for the perfect green. There is a world of greens out there including blue-greens like aqua and teal, and yellow-greens like apple green and olive.
DO consider green as a neutral. A muted or gray-green can easily serve as a neutral color. The key to a green neutral its level of gray, which is considered a neutral itself. A gray-green used in amonochromatic color scheme with gray neutrals, is a soothing and sophisticated look.

DON'T forget that the green foliage outside your windows can reflect a green cast inside and intensify your green decor. Always sample paint and try out green furniture and fabric in the room before committing. Many homeowners have been stumped by the color reflecting back into their home and altering the colors they chose.  Even bare dirt outside your window can cast a red glow on your green interior.

DO think of using lively greens as accents if you’re not ready for a green sofa or green walls. Try a vivid green accent table, or paint the inside back of a bookcase for a peek of  color. If you love green but aren’t sure if it should be the centerpiece of your color scheme, create a scheme with green as an accent color. 

DO consider using a color wheel when creating a color scheme based on green. Green is at its most harmonious in an analogous color scheme. That is a scheme using three colors that are adjacent to each other on the color wheel. A analogous scheme of blue-green, green, and green yellow can make a refreshing palette. An analogous color scheme works best with one dominant color, with the two adjacent colors as accents.

DO think creatively when adding green to your color palette. Think beyond just combining green with neutrals. Green can be fantastic with yellow, pink, and even purple, if you plan your color scheme carefully. Color schemes from the 1960s and 1970s paired grass green with sunny yellow and hot pink. Earthy retro schemes combined avocado green with harvest gold, and burnt orange. While these vintage schemes may not be right for your home, it shows the total versatility of green.

Is Green a Warm or Cool Color?





With a warm and cool pedigree, green can go either direction on the temperature scale. A pure green is generally considered cool, if the blue and yellow are equally balanced. The green you see on a color wheel is that perfectly balanced green. But, it’s also a green that is more suited for business logos, toys, and garden plastics.

Seeing the nuances of warm versus cool greens is the secret to choosing the right green. Knowing the basics of warm versus cool colors is going to make all of your color choices easier as you select fabric, furniture, and paint.  

In the architectural paint industry, greens are expressed using RGB (red, green, blue) values. If you view the RGB value of a green paint color, you can get a hint of warm versus cool by the ratio of (R) to (B) in the formula. A green paint color like Sherwin Williams Aloe is a cool green, as the (B) blue value is slightly larger than the (R) number in the RGB value description on the color detail page. The architectural paint industry also uses color descriptions which identify some greens as yellow-greens. These are considered warm greens, while the blue-greens are considered cool. 

Cool Greens - How to Use them

Cool greens have a few color personalities. A sage green, which is muted with gray, is one of the most popular greens in decorating and is often referred to as a neutral. Sage green, and other gray-greens, can take some trial and error to get the right color because of blue undertones that may be present. A blue undertone may only become apparent once you’ve added sage green near a warm colored item in the room. Medium to light wood cabinets and furniture are often the foils of blueish sage green, because of the juxtaposition of blue and yellow on the color wheel. A warm green might be a better choice if your sage green feels cold next to the existing colors in the room. 

Green-blue or aqua, can also be considered cool greens. These fresh and fun colors are much more straightforward to the eye than sage green. Though they are more vibrant than sage green, they can also be soothing and relaxing colors. Without the mysterious gray tones, it’s much easier to choose the right color. Aqua is a surprisingly versatile color that transcends beachy decor, into contemporary color schemes with ease. 

Warm Greens - How to Use Them

When you see the term ‘warm green’ what it really means is yellow-green. Apple green, chartreuse, wasabi, are all popular warm greens in decorating today. Warm greens can bet muted or clear and crisp. 

A contemporary color scheme with dark woods and other deep colors, works well with a muted olive or wasabi green. A vibrant yellow-green is fun in a vintage palette, with pops of pink and yellow, or even red. Sampling a vivid warm green in a room is essential, as this lively color can overwhelm in big doses. This makes warm green a perfect accent color. 

How to use green silk wallpaper to decorate your house?





Green is one of the most versatile colors for decorating. The ability to be a warm or a cool color, allows you to use it for a calming or an energizing effect. You can use green in any room as a wall color, cabinet color, furniture, or accessories.

Every color has a meaning, or mood. Green is known as the color of abundance and life. Growing grass, leaves, and verdant hills reflect the energy of life. The energy and association of living things, makes the careful choosing the right green for you home essential. Restful greens are wonderful for bedrooms, while energized greens are perfect for socializing.

Green Silk plaster are unique, have stainless finish and a bright vibrant touch which gives a feel of royal and class interiors whenever and wherever used at. Basically they are a perfect finish for a bedroom, kitchen, office, hotel lobbies, hotel reception area, kids room etc. No limitation for any kind of formal or informal use. So, time to get the new touch and unique feel of green silk plaster for your super special and loving interiors!

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