If you don’t understand the title of this post, that means you haven’t read Naomi’s recent post on her home color palette. Go do that, and then you may return.
Like Naomi, I also elected to paint my bedroom purple when I was a kid. Unlike Naomi, I am “lucky” enough to still have a purple room in my home — actually a shade of lilac that isn’t too far off from that childhood bedroom of days gone by. As I share my home color palette, keep in mind that we just moved last fall into a house where every room needed to be repainted, and we’ve only made it about halfway through at this point.
So here’s what we’ve got, according to my very scientific recordings:
All of these colors are Benjamin Moore, which we usually have color matched to Olympic ONE paint. And let’s pretend that “mystery color” is the official name of a color, rather than acknowledging that I painted my bathroom a color that looks a whole heck of a lot like this (very dark blue/gray), and totally didn’t record the color (and threw away the can because I used up all the paint). After I had been in this home improvement game for several years. And already had a blog. What was I thinking?
I wish I could say that the palette stops there, but that would be excluding about 50% of the house. Here’s what we still have to contend with (color names are not official, but I think Benjamin Moore should consider adopting them).
So without further ado, let me take you through this wonderfully incomplete and evolving color journey!
Let’s start with the places where we’ve been intentional. The first place we painted when we moved in was the living room, and I knew from the start that I wanted a light gray to replace the dark red that had been there.
On the first day we moved in (while the seller was still slowly removing her belongings from the house, even though we’d already closed on it…), we whipped out our paint brushes and went from this on the walls:To this, “moonshine” by Benjamin Moore:
It’s a very light gray, with blue undertones. I chose it because I wanted a very light neutral for both the main living space and to continue into the hallway and stairwell, and this one fit the bill. I will confess that I bought it before looking at a paint chip on the wall because we needed to buy it before we moved into the house so we could paint immediately upon moving during a very short window before our furniture arrived from storage, which is a total decorating no-no. But I think it worked out, so I’m relieved. Oh also, one day the baseboard radiators will get painted white, but as you saw from the second color palette above, I currently have bigger fish to fry.
The living room attaches to the hallway, which was a big makeover project this winter. We also have moonshine on the walls, plus semi-gloss white on the trim, paneling, and doors (the precise shade is some generic store variety, I confess I’m not on top of my trim color the way Naomi is). Also in the hallway are some more colorful accessorizing colors that I picked out to add some pizzazz: “surf blue” on the back of the built-ins and “spirit in the sky” on the inside of the front door. The surf blue and spirit in the sky are meant to tie into the patterned stair risers I created using fabric and mod podge:
Off of the hallway are the bathroom and master bedroom, both of which we decided to paint darker colors to contrast with the light and airy main living spaces. This is my first time with dark walls, and I absolutely love it in both rooms. We have “black pepper” on the walls of the bedroom, creating what I like to call our “sophisticated cave“:
While black pepper is a dark gray, it has blue undertones so it reads like a very dark blue in a lot of lights.
The bathroom came in a totally lovely shade of lime green:
But that just wasn’t cutting it for us. I had been thinking about a light shade of blue, but Naomi suggested something dark to make the brown tiles look lighter in comparison and she was so right. I considered a bunch of options:
And then picked a color that I forgot to record (and I can’t even sleuth from this photo, because I remember that the color I ultimately picked was on a strip that fell down before I snapped this pic because of the humidity after a shower). It is dark blue/gray, and wonderful — especially with the colorful and inexpensive art we’ve added. I painted both the walls and the ceiling, which I think helps the small space feel more cohesive and draws less attention to the relatively low ceiling.
The last room we’ve painted so far is our home gym, in the basement. We started with dark wood paneling, and wanted to lighten up the space with paint and mirrors. Here’s where we started:
And where things are now with “chantilly lace” on the walls:
I totally copied Naomi on the shade of white — Sam decided on a whim that he wanted to buy paint for the basement while we were at the hardware store one day, and I hadn’t picked out a specific white yet so I just went with what I knew Naomi had used as white throughout her house. When in doubt, copy Naomi.
So that’s where things stand now! I think I want to add some warmer colors as we trudge through the rest of the rooms, though nothing too crazy. And here’s a quick tour of what we’ll be slowly painting over:
In the kitchen, we have this lovely shade I like to call “childhood bedroom”:
It goes especially well with our bright blue counters, wouldn’t you say?
Upstairs we have the watermelon craft room:
And the blue, floral, and wood paneled guest room:
And then we have the sunroom, which is currently a lovely shade I like to describe as “taupe-ish/green-ish.” It’s not terrible, but it’s not my style.
So that’s where we are with our home color palette! Not quite as complete and pulled together as Naomi’s, but we’re making progress!
(Sharing at Weekend Re-Treat Link Party, Two Uses Tuesday, Tip Me Tuesday, and Link Party Palooza)
Dorothy Mammen says
It’s amazing what a difference some paint can make! I wonder if we should paint the master bathroom at Springside Rd a darker color to lighten those tiles … I never thought of that!
Sage says
It really is transformative. Hmmm, a darker color could look great there, it does get good light so it wouldn’t be too cave-like! 🙂
Gaidig says
I think I would call that greenish color celadon or sage. Seems more appealing.
Sage says
So true! I wish calling it by a different name would make the paint itself look a little more appealing in person 🙂