Fung
shui doesn't have to be just the punchline of jokes. If you plan your room schemes
so that the colors relate to those in adjacent areas, your home will have a unified
and harmonious feel.
Your
home is like a huge blank canvas, and just as an artist considers his canvas as
a whole rather than section by section, so you need to think about the way the
colors in one area relate to, and are affected by, those in the rooms that lead
off it. Each room should have a distinctive character that reflects its shape,
size, function, and aspect. But if every room is treated as a separate entity,
the house will lack a sense of coherence.
Ideally,
the progress from one space to another should not be visually jarring, but there
is always a place for colorful surprises. If you plan carefully you can use color
to provide visual links, and to lead the eye from room to room so that the house
acquires a sense of continuity, spaciousness, and completeness, regardless of
its size.
Start
by walking around your house, making a note of those areas that pose potential
problems. The entrance hall is important because it is where visitors gain their
first impression of your home. Throw all the doors open and survey the house as
though you are a stranger. Notice the way the walls of the hall, and the architraves
of the doors act as frames for the rooms beyond. Go into the rooms that lead off,
and look back into the hallway. Doors pose an interesting problem because when
they open into a room, the color on the outside becomes part of the room.
Providing
logical progressions of color is most important in open plan homes, and in any
part of the house where one space leads on from another -- in rooms leading off
a hallway, in bedrooms with an attached bathroom, and in kitchens with a dining
area, for example.
Now
it's time to break down the walls!
The
walls are the most obvious place to start your decorative scheme. Think about
the main planes of color on walls, floors, ceilings, doors, and furniture, and
the points at which they will butt up to each other. Apply test color to large
sheets of card and stand them against walls and alongside each other to assess
their impact.
The simplest color schemes are based on different shades of the same color. In
the rooms off a hallway, for example, you could use shades of rose, pale terra
cotta, and crimson, with white or sage green woodwork and architraves, providing
a unifying link. Harmonious colors -- colors from the same sector of the color
wheel -- also provide a ready-made unity. So blues, greens, and blue-greens used
in adjacent spaces will allow the eye to flow effortlessly from one space to the
other.
Pleasing
effects can be achieved by teaming harmonious or neutral colors with a carefully
chosen contrast color. Balance dramatic wall colors with neutral floors and natural
materials. Another approach is to use a range of related neutrals on walls and
floors, with accent colors to create impact and mood in the different rooms.
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