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17 answers

Definitely something neutral. Along the cream lines or you could go as far as a light taupe. Nothing more drastic, or it will compete with your floor.

2006-08-14 05:42:03 · answer #1 · answered by AlloAllo 4 · 0 0

The use of color is also something very personal. It stimulates our senses, power our mood, and helps create a particular ambiance. How we respond to an individual color depends on our nature, extroverts tend to feel happy with bold colors, while introverts prefer more passive colors.

Through using specific combinations of color, combined with a careful consideration of simple color schemes is often the most effective.

Try not to use more than one or two principal colors in a room, as well as a contrasting or balancing tone. The best way to choose a background color for the room is to trial with a palette of different shades and tones, in combination with the color and textures of the furniture and materials. Remember the general color schemes of a home have to be in agreement. The walls define the space in a room, while the colors, to a large degree, define the mood.

Colored light, furnishing materials, and structural proportions, we can create a home that is welcoming, helpful, and comfortable. Walls are similar to background music: each color tone is like a musical note can create a pleasant-sounding harmony while others grate with each other.

The color with which we surround ourselves will without doubt have an effect on us, and so it is important to feel comfortable with our choice. A discussion with a professional color consultant can help to decide individual needs and select appropriate color.

Colors can be divided into three main groups: those that stimulate and uplift, those that relax and calm, and those that provide harmony or balance. So, having taken a number of things into thought when decorating a room, such as the size of the space, the amount of light, the function if the room, and the style and mood we wish to create, we finally, and most importantly, need to consider the needs of the people who use it.

2006-08-14 08:19:42 · answer #2 · answered by Roger K 2 · 0 0

I once had red carpet in an apartment. The walls were all white and the kitchen and bathroom had black and white fixtures, appliances etc. You can be more daring though and go for a subtle color. If you go to the paint stores they sell sample bottles. You can pick two colors you like, take them home, and smear on the walls to see which one goes better. I'm thinking something warm.

2006-08-14 05:44:15 · answer #3 · answered by deedee 3 · 0 0

depends on what you're going for.

I personally would pick a mustardy-yellow or golden-yellow and decorate with blacks, reds, golds and browns and make it oriental or indian styled. It would be fun.

Or do a deep rosey cream and decorate with pinks and reds and whites and flowery stuff.

You can do a red wall, too, of the same color. Kind of freakish, but you could offset it with lots of big neutral decor to tone it down.

Also gray would be really good with red, especially for a studio apartment. I would say a darker gray, like dark cement gray maybe, with off-white trim. Decorate with some bright reds, steel/metal, blacks and whites. Be pretty nifty:)

good luck and have some fun with it!

2006-08-14 06:07:17 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Something calming; any theatre student will tell you that too much red tires out an audience quickly. Perhaps orange (but not a deep one) would be best because you don't want a cool color that really contrasts with the red, like blue or green would.

2006-08-14 05:44:23 · answer #5 · answered by ensign183 5 · 0 0

I would go with a buttery color, a warm, light golden-yellow. I used a paint by Glidden called "Newborn" in my dining room and have lots of red accents. It looks rich and also cheerful. White would look too stark and gray too cold. Blues or greens wouldn't work either,but possibly a shade of brown or taupe would look good, depending on the overall look you want.

2006-08-14 16:37:11 · answer #6 · answered by mab5096 7 · 0 0

I think you should go with a light brown or khaki color. You could do a darker brown on the trim as an accent color, but definitely nothing real dark for the walls.

2006-08-14 05:47:51 · answer #7 · answered by JoKimo 1 · 0 0

A green color is the opposite of red on the color scale. Since it is a studio apt. I expect it may be small, so a pale or muted green or white would work best.

2006-08-14 05:46:27 · answer #8 · answered by DeeDee 6 · 0 0

White & Black on opposite walls. Accents should be red. Like a throw pillow or a vase.

2006-08-14 09:58:51 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it extremely is optimal considering the fact which you say its easy. it extremely is going to experience chilly no longer homey. I lived in a house with easy gray partitions for awhile and stale white carpeting and it felt drab to me. yet once you have black fixtures and you like present day it may be the factor for you. in case you desire to experience comfortable use heat colorations (easy heat colorations) yellows, golds, tans. basically stay with easy colorations so the area seems larger and not smaller.

2016-12-17 10:40:11 · answer #10 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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