Bold colors can be worked into any successful design
It might be practical, of course, to decorate your home with neutral colors and muted earth tones. No need to worry about colors clashing if most everything is white, beige and light brown.
But what if you’re a fan of vivid orange, lime green or a luscious shade of lavender?
These colors can be tricky to use successfully in decor. But you don’t need to avoid them, says interior designer Brian Patrick Flynn, creator of the Flynnside Out design blog. Just use them carefully.
“It’s a game of balance,” Flynn said. “Once you get that right, just about any color can be spectacular.”
Here, Flynn and two other designers – Kyle Schuneman of Live Well Designs and Betsy Burnham of Burnham Design – share advice on decorating successfully with even the most complicated colors.
For a client who loved lime green, Schuneman covered one dining room wall with wallpaper that combined bright lime green with a muted sage green. He painted the other three walls in the neutral sage. That way, the client could enjoy a favorite color but the room didn’t feel overwhelming.
“There can only be one star in a room,” Schuneman said. “If you want a bold color, then you already have your star.”
Burnham agrees: “Orange next to screaming lime green next to fuchsia,” she says, “doesn’t belong in a grown-up space.” But fuchsia paired with olive green can look chic.
The same approach works for paler colors. Pastel pink used with pastel yellow and pastel blue creates an overload of sweetness. But Flynn has found that a light pastel pink can be gorgeous paired with a dark, calming navy blue.
When clients are considering a very bright color, Flynn often advises them to choose one “two shades lighter or less saturated than the one they’re iffy about.”
“Nine times out of 10,” he says, “they end up still getting the effect, but without the color becoming too saturated to live with.”
No matter what the color, all three designers recommend picking a shade that’s got some gray mixed in. For a living room done in shades of purple and lavender, Burnham chose a sofa fabric that was a mix of gray and purple, and used a white paint infused with a bit of gray on the walls.
“Gray has a way of calming a color down,” Schuneman said, making it “feel velvety and more soothing.”
“There are lots of ways to incorporate color without having to commit to a wall color,” Schuneman says. “Paint an old media cabinet in a bold purple to make it a hot conversation piece.”
Taxicab yellow walls would be awful, said Burnham, but one bright yellow throw or ceramic lamp could satisfy your desire for that shade without overpowering a room.
If your heart is set on a tough color and you’re not content with adding just a single accessory, Burnham suggests consulting an expert. Many interior designers will do a color consultation, walking through your home to discuss how favorite colors might work there.
Rather than layering a room with creams and beiges, Schuneman suggests blues.
“I actually think of blue as a neutral,” he says. “I love it and always have it in my house, and have used shades from sky to royal to navy.”
Even vivid blues can have a calming effect. “Everyone gravitates to oceans and lakes, and it makes people feel good,” Schuneman says.
Flynn says the payoff can be fabulous. “To make a splash with blue in a bold way, I suggest using Klein Blue, also referred to as electric blue,” he says. “It’s got a ton of purple mixed in, so it feels rather royal. And when you mix it with red, it’s magical.”