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Perfect paint and color can make a great difference to your home décor project.
Here are some tips for amateur home decorators and professional interior
designers that can help them understand the color basics and make paint
selection easier:
* Alkyd or oil-based paints are good for wood painting and does not leave it
sticky in winters but latex or water-based paints dry faster, can be cleaned
with soapy water and does not turn yellow easily and is thus, better for walls.
* Chosen paint colors may look different in different lights, at daytime and at
night. So, you may want to access the look of the room in different lights and
according to the function of the room.
* Colors can look darker or lighter over a large area depending on the colors of
the surroundings and lighting in the room, so keep that in mind while choosing
the right tint or shade of the color.
* Dark and warm shades make rooms look smaller such as red, orange, yellow and
even dark shades of navy blue while light and cool colors make the room look
larger and more spacious such as light shades of blue, green and even violet.
Best colors for small rooms are white and light and pale neutral colors.
* For an open, spacious and airy look in a room with chair rails, paint the
portion below the chair rail in a dark shade and the wall above it in a light
shade.
* Generally, ceilings are painted in pure white, off white and tinted white
colors to make them appear high and make the room look open but if ceilings are
high enough, one can use medium to dark colors to make the room look cozier as
they tend to make the ceiling advance to the eyes of the viewer.
* Since colors affect the mood, choose relaxing muted colors for bedrooms and
stimulating colors for kitchen and dining room.
* Taking furniture, window treatments and accessories of the room into
consideration, determine the color scheme of the room.
* To add bold dash of colors to the room, use a darker shade to paint the trims
than the walls.
* To add subtle accents to the room, use a lighter shade to paint your trims.
* To calculate the amount of paint you need for a room, multiply the height of
the room by its perimeter taking care not to count the doors, windows and
archways in the room to calculate its wall space. Then ask the paint stores for
the exact amount of paint your will need for the calculated wall space of the
room and number of coats you are planning for. Since blue and yellow colors need
more coats, you will need more of them, in case you are using them.
* To disguise an unattractive trim or achieve a monochromatic, uniform look,
paint your trim in the same color as your walls.
* To soften the look of a bold color on walls, you can try rag rolling, sponging
or color washing the walls using a light muted shade.
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