Resene Lemon Grass is a smoky grey green neutral, remindful of an overcast day.
Sherwin Williams Mercurial SW 9550: LRV, Undertones and a Little More When it comes to finding the BEST paint color it's ALLLLL in the undertones. Okay,
These neutral paint color ideas liven up any space. Here are expert ideas and suggestions for how to use neutrals in your home.
Hazelnut Ecru color palette summer symphony · combining warm elegance with harmonious hues of hazel · ecru · beige & grey · Color Palette · Color · Beige · Brown · Ecru · Grey · Neutral · Summer · FHI Cotton TCX · PANTONE 11-0809 TCX Ecru · PANTONE 11-4201 TCX Cloud Dancer · PANTONE 14-1315 TCX Hazelnut · PANTONE 15-0000 TCX Dove · FHI Polyester TSX · PANTONE 12-4401 TSX Antique Crinoline
Find inspiration for your home's color palette with this round up of the best interior paint colors. These popular hues, including neutrals, blues, greens, and more, suit any room.
We've slowly been chipping away at our home projects for our Ryan Homes Olsen model. We've been in our home just about 3 months now, so it's been a slooow process. ;) First up, our
Picking paint colors is probably the most difficult decorating issue of all. What folks really want is a palette for no fail paint colors. A sure thing...
Happy Friday my friends! Today I wanted to post my top 10 favorite warm gray paint colors. So if you are looking for that perfect gray that is not too beigey, yet not too cool, this post is for you. (Agreeable Gray by Sherwin Williams. Meditation by Benjamin Moore. Revere Pewter by Benjamin Moore. Sandy...Read More
Dusty rose hides a surprising depth · Is it romance · nostalgia · or something more? Find out · Color Story
I have been adding a number of greys to the Painted Watercolour Swatches section of my website, which you can see here. I noticed how much the colour of 'Payne's Grey' varies between the different brands, ranging from a warmer blue-grey to a cooler blue-grey to a more neutral grey. Pretty much all have black in the mix, which makes it a convenience colour that doesn't interest me as black pigments seem to dull a painting badly. It got me wondering, though, who Payne was. A little Googling and Wikipedia had the answer - William Payne was an English watercolourist, and the colour was made for him. The term has been used in English since 1835. Interestingly though, the original version did not contain black. It contained iron blue (known as Prussian Blue, PB27), Yellow Ochre (PY43) and Crimson Lake, which as far as I can find is a fugitive carmine pigment PR23. I don't have any PR23 to look at but I thought I'd mix some Yellow Ochre, Prussian blue and a Permanent Alizarin together and see what I could get. (All watercolours Daniel Smith unless otherwise noted.) Traditional Payne's Grey mix of pigments - yellow ochre, Prussian blue and a crimson. It makes some interesting greys. With more Prussian blue it turns into a cool dark blue-grey, similar to the commercial black and blue mixes available. The interesting thing is the way the yellow ochre and crimson pop up in blooms. I made these mixes using tube paint mixed in a pan to get it really strong, to have plenty to play with. Yellow ochre, Prussian Blue and Permanent Crimson actually make a rather interesting old-fashioned looking triad to paint with. Since I don't use Prussian blue in my palette, I thought I'd experiment with some other colours. I switched to Ultramarine PB29 and PV19 Alizarin Crimson Quinacridone - a single pigment crimson from Da Vinci - and tested that trio in a strong wash. Two granulating colours made it too dull. Next I tried the same yellow ochre and crimson with Phthalo Blue GS - another cool transparent blue, like Prussian blue. I think this may be fairly authentic - I can see this being a useful mixed grey. I switched to Indanthrone Blue to try making a warmer grey. I like this - rather like my Jane's Grey - so not necessary to create. Exploring Payne's Grey variations Then I tried both transparent blues with Quinacridone Gold instead of Yellow Ochre. This makes almost a black, that could be warmer or cooler depending on the amount of blue added, and which one is used. Interesting to explore, perhaps also with Quinacridone Rose, but not mixtures I feel I need. Though why do all of the commercial mixes contain blacks instead of these wonderful colours? Next I come to Davy's Grey - another grey named after an Englishman, Henry Davy. It was a mix of powdered slate, iron oxide and carbon black. The commercial versions are quite different, though interestingly QoR make an Ardoise grey using PBk19 which was in the original watercolour for Davy. Winsor & Newton use a white, a green and a black pigment today. It's not a colour I have ever seen a use for. So then I thought about Neutral Tint - another grey that has been around since the 18th century. It was designed to be used in mixing to darken colours without changing their hue. Today most also contain a black pigment, with a couple of exceptions such as Neutral Tint by M.Graham, which is PG7 + PV19, Schmincke Neutral Grey, which is PR255 + PB60 + P062, and Old Holland has a 4 pigment mix of PB15:2 + PV19 +PR259 + PBr7! Bruce MacEvoy of Handprint fame mentions his 'synthetic black' recipe with uses PB60+PB25+PG7 in roughly the ratio 8:6:1. I have Indanthrone Blue and Phthalo Green in my palette, but the only available PBr25 I could find are DS Permanent Brown and W&N limited edition Indian Red Deep - both transparent reddish brown watercolours. I mixed them as suggested and created a rich and rather lovely RGB black. [Update - Mission Gold also have a PBr25 Red Brown, though I haven't tried it.] However you can easily make a rich transparent black with just Phthalo Green and Pyrrol Crimson, which I premix to make 'Jane's Black (R/G)'. This is a fantastic mixed black that can easily be adjusted to a deep green or a deep maroon when painting and is perfect for floral subjects - especially red flowers. Mixing blacks and greys - MacEvoy's Synthetic Black, Jane's Black R/G, Jane's Black B/O, Jane's Black R/B and Jane's Grey. You can also mix Phthalo Blue RS with Transparent Pyrrol Orange to make my other favourite custom black 'Jane's Black (B/O)'. (2019 Update - Transparent Pyrrol Orange has changed to more of a mid-orange rather than the red-orange I originally used for this mixed black.) Phthalo Blue Green Shade will make another black with Pyrrol Scarlet, Jane's Black R/B. It could be useful in landscapes where prussian blue and indigo blue hues are also needed. And then of course there is Jane's Grey that I premix that works as a neutral tint, without the addition of a black pigment. The other advantage of this pair is that the grey is liftable. Many mixed greys are staining. 2018 update - available in the Daniel Smith Ultimate Mixing Set in a half pan. 2019 update - now available in a tube as a signature colour from Daniel Smith (affiliate link to Jacksonsart.com) There are two single pigment darks that interest me - DS Lunar Black, the fantastic granulation creates wonderful effects, and DS Graphite Grey. This is like painting with liquid pencil - it even has a slight sheen. Really interesting to use. It is easy to mix a number of greys and blacks with regular palette colours but mixing them from the tube paints and allowing them to dry in the palette does speed up the painting process and enable you to get good darks fast. I'd still rather mix them myself than buy the commercial versions currently available. What about you? Update - here are some extra swatches of the colours shown above and discussed in comments below. Notice that DS Burnt Sienna PBr7 is slightly more orange than the DS permanent Brown PBr25 or W&N Indian Red Deep PBr25. W&N Burnt Sienna PR101 is much more of a burnt orange hue. Brown Madder W&N or DS Quinacridone Burnt Scarlet are made with PR206 - another transparent earth red option. There is also the option of PR179 Perylene Maroon is another interesting transparent neutralised red but it varies hugely by manufacturer. I have shown the more burnt scarlet version by W&N. In Daniel Smith is is far more of a maroon and in Daler Rowney it is a deep crimson. Many more interesting red and brown watercolour samples can be found on my website in the Painted Watercolour Swatches section. They are arrange by colour first, then by pigment.
What inspired this Sophisticated Scandinavian look is; it's incredibly easy to live with & I am currently tweaking my own living room and I would love this!
{ nature tones } | image via: @hannievanbreda The post Nature Tones appeared first on Design Seeds.
I am planning to do some painting this weekend, revamp the kids toy room and repair a few holes in walls which means a…
I picked up 3 Zoyas from their last promo (3 for $10, shipped), and got another bottle in a swap. Here are the swatches and comparisons: Zoya Evvie - 2 coats, excellent formula. A dusty green with a tiny bit of blue in it. This reminds me of Avon Olive Green (the RBL ONS dupe), but I purged that a while ago. I think the Avon was darker and more saturated, though. Comparison: Zoya Evvie and Essie Power Clutch - The Zoya looks quite a bit bluer compared to the Essie. They don't look as close IRL as they do in this picture. If you are into greens like the Essie, I think it's worth having both :D Zoya Natty - 2 coats, also excellent formula. A dusty cool blue. I love polishes that have a greyish quality to them! Comparison: Zoya Natty and Orly Sapphire Silk (both 2 coats) - The Orly has quite a bit more green than the Zoya. On the nail, I think I like the Zoya better than the Orly (which is one of my favourite cremes!) They are different enough to own both, but I'm thinking of purging the Orly because I think I like the Zoya on my skintone better. Comparison: Zoya Natty and Misa Office Polish-tics (both 2 coats) - The Misa is quite a bit more grey and almost purpler. This Misa is one of my favourite cremes too; it is very nice :D Zoya Dree - 2 coats, a pretty-ugly greenish brown. This is actually more flattering than you might think! Comparison: Zoya Dree (2 coats) and Illamasqua Hectic (3 coats) - Illa Hectic is one of my favourite cremes as well, and it is just a bit greener than the Zoya. They are not dupes, but they are very very similar. I like both of these more than RBL No More War, on my skintone. Zoya Blaze - 2 coats. A pinky-red scattered holo. I don't even like scattered holos and this is gorgeous IRL. I'm glad I let someone talk me into getting it! The formula is excellent.
I tried. I tried to resist. And then today on Lily's Quilts for her Dead Simple QAL, she had a post titled Resistance is Futile. Really? A Star Trek NG reference? I could no longer resist. It was futile. Here is my color palette from Design Seeds. I think over there someone is secretly an evil borg, trying to make us all do this QAL, and I mean that in the nicest possible way. Because I secretly did want to participate, just needed that one extra push, or mind meld, whatever.
En el internado Parking Souls todo parece fluir con normalidad, excepto porque sus paredes esconden secretos. Seok Jihye se encuentra con un diario empolvado que exuda misterio por cada una de sus páginas, y que tiene un poder especial que la condenará de por vida a dos almas atormentadas. Jeon Jungkook y Kim Taehyung son almas totalmente opuestas, pero mantienen una oscura y transcendental relación con el diario que supera los límites humanos, incluso los de Jihye. •Heterosexual, trío (?) •Contenido explícito y vulgar +18 •Humor •Fantasía, au •Mención de culto •Violencia, sangre (?) •Temas delicados •Inspirada en Death Note