7 results found with an empty search
- Small change - big difference
If you follow me on social media you would have seen that we recently changed the rug in the lounge to something much more fun, colourful and bright. Using colour in your home doesnât always have to mean redecorating. A simple switch up of the small things can make a big impact and bring more colour joy to your home. So here are my top tips on ways you can do just that. Bedding For lots of us, our bed takes up the most amount of space in the bedroom and sits right in the middle of the space. So, why not dress it in something lovely, and show it off! There are loads of options for bedding out there â whether youâre into florals, stripes, gingham, plain, abstract, there will be something out there for you. Just make sure it ties in with the colours in the room â so look at your wall colours, curtains, rugs or accessories as a starting point for your bedding colour. Cushions Another easy win! Cushions are very reasonably priced from places like Dunelm and George. Having a few cushions on your sofa can really elevate the look. If you have painted walls and a plain sofa, use cushions as a way to introduce an accent colour and a bit of pattern. You could go all out with different patterns, textures and prints, all keep it relatively simple with plain and stripes, say. Just stick to a tight colour scheme and it will work! Rugs There are soooo many different rugs on the market and these are another great way to add colour and impact to a room. If you are going for a plain colour, why not pick a thick pile with lots of texture for added interest. There are modern geometrics, vintage oriental, stripes and scallops and everything in between to choose from. Lamp shades Lighting in a room is a necessity but the functionality doesnât mean we neglect the opportunity to add something attractive to look at! My personal favourites: big drum shades for ceiling pendants â again plenty of interesting ones on the market, and patterned tapered shades for table lamps. Got any scraps of fabric or wallpaper leftover from a project? Why not upcycle a boring lampshade by covering it with leftover materials. Then you get something completely unique! Â Artwork and Photos When you go to someone elseâs house do you have a good snoop at their photos and artwork? I know I do! It shows peopleâs personality â often their family and friends, their travels, their interests. Every picture tells a story. And of course every photograph, print or piece of artwork adds colour! Whether itâs childrenâs artwork pinned up, a gallery of family photos, a graphic design print, or a masterpiece, all can bring colour and joy to your walls. Tableware/kitchen Finally, lets not neglect thinking about colour in the kitchen. There are ample opportunities to bring colour in in small ways. Think tea towels, table cloths, plates and glasses. I have seen lots of lovely table spreads recently where the crockery is patterned and mis-matched and it works wonderfully! You can even get coloured appliances to sit on your worktop to add an accent and further interest. Pink kettle anyone?
- Spring
We are well and truly into the spring now and most people I speak to like this time of year. There is a renewed sense of optimism and hope after the long winter months. Colours are popping up everywhere in gardens and the countryside, trees are bursting into life having been bare branches for many months. Itâs positively joyful! If you were to bottle up all that optimism and joy that we see in nature and put it into your home, what kind of colours would there be? Well, a spring colour palette typically features colours which are light, fresh and clean. When I say light I donât just mean pastel and light shades â more light as in the opposite of heavy. Where Autumn colours have an earthiness and heaviness to them, spring colours are lightweight and bouncy! There is nothing heavy or muddy about spring colours. They are there to lift the spirits and feel fresh and lively. Think primrose yellow â bright but delicate. Zingy greens with all those leaves busily growing on the trees. Pastel shades, and clear blue â just like the sky on a beautiful spring day. We can also carry this line of thinking into personality. Iâve talked before about our seasonal personalities and how colour relates to this. My husband is a classic spring personality! He is full of energy and bounce, friendly and enthusiastic. He loves nature, and the longer, lighter days. Other characteristics of the spring personality might be welcoming, youthful, lively, and upbeat. Can you see how this resonates with what is going on in nature at this time? When we understand our seasonal personality, we can then use this knowledge to choose the colours that we wear, and the colours that we use in our homes. So people with a spring personality will be drawn to these lighter, clearer colours, with nothing heavy. They will like rooms filled with natural light, that connect with the outdoors. When thinking about patterns, they would appreciate small scale prints, ditsy flowers, fine stripes and polka dots - these are quite playful and fun! Whatever our personalities are like, lets enjoy all the colours and fun that spring has to offer!
- Putting together mood boards
How does it all begin? This month I want to share with you a little more about my design process and how I go about putting a colour scheme and mood board together. There needs to be something in the room which acts as a spring board for the rest of the design. This might be something the client already has â a colourful rug they love or a piece of artwork which they would like to display. If the room really is a blank canvas, then my job is to come up with that âhero pieceâ or the inspiration. I use wallpapers, patterned textiles, artwork, or sometimes even the view from the window to draw inspiration and act as the hero of the room â the piece from which the colour scheme will evolve. During the first colour consultation with my clients, I discuss these options, all the time listening and getting an insight in to how they want the room to function and feel. Once I have a starting point in mind, I can build a colour palette around that. The main wall colour is the next thing to pick out â a colour that will tie in with the inspiration piece, but will also fit with the purpose of the room, the aspect and lighting, the mood and feel. From wall colours I move to accent colours, starting big with things like rugs, curtains or blinds, and furniture. Each of these items need to stick closely with the colour scheme, so that the whole room will look cohesive. Thatâs not to say you canât mix patterns â Iâm all for that! But they do need to have similar colours in them to tie together. More on that another time. Once I have picked out the big pieces for the room, I can move on to different types of lighting, other soft furnishings and accessories. And so it builds up, layer by layer. Clients I work with are often looking to change the dĂ©cor, but not necessarily everything  in the room. Often things like flooring and big pieces of furniture need to stay, or they have a particular item they want to incorporate. It is really important for me to consider the colours, patterns and textures of these often much loved pieces. I love this challenge of making existing items work within new colour schemes, so that every detail about the room works together. I see putting together mood boards for clients as something of an art form. I donât pretend to know much about painting, but my guess is artists start with a background, layer up the colour, and add the details to bring together something beautiful. This is how I see designing rooms - first comes the inspiration, then the wall colours, accents colours, then the finer details. And then, hopefully, a masterpiece. My ethos is all about giving people confidence to use colour in their homes and so it is such a joy to be able to put together these mood boards for clients, so that they can go away with confidence to redecorate and shop colourfully!
- Winter
What do you think of when you think of winter? Cold, wet, grey, bleak. Snow â perhaps for some. Or, more positively, low sun, crisp frosts, wearing the winter woollies and drinking hot chocolate. As I write this, the rain is lashing down, thereâs a strong wind and my feet are cold. But, I have enjoyed some of the better winter days weâve had over the last month. Having to squint because the sun is so strong and low in my eyes, walking in the countryside where my boots crunch over the frozen ground, and hearing the squeals of joy as my children were pulled on a sledge up and down our road. Back in October, I introduced the idea of seasonal personalities â kicking off with the autumn personality, and how this can then feed in to the way we decorate and style our homes. With all the seasonal personalities, they claim many of their characteristics from nature, and hopefully you will be able to see how nature, personality and home dĂ©cor all connect. People who have a winter personality might be described as being confident, ambitious, driven, unsentimental, and sophisticated. They like luxury items and arenât afraid to show them off. Theyâre drawn to modern architecture and statement pieces. How does this link to home dĂ©cor? Well, think firstly of a typical winter landscape. Rolling hills blanketed in crisp white snow. Trees and hedges, shed of all their leaves, silhouetted against that backdrop. Pops of green and red with evergreens and berries. It is a time of minimal colour, and strong contrasts. That image lends itself to the striking, minimalist style that winter personalities would want to create. Their style might be minimalistic, but they want to create drama by using striking contrasts in colour, textures and patterns. Think black and white, perhaps with some pops of very vivid, saturated colour. Stainless steel and polished chrome, glass and concrete. Sharp patterns and geometric shapes. Granite and marble. No clutter, and instead a few, high end, statement pieces. Does this resonate with you? If it does, then it probably means you have some of the winter personality in you! If not, roll on the spring!
- As White As Snow
White. What comes to mind when you think of white? Fresh, crisp, hotel bedding? Brand new socks at the start of the school year? Snow covered fields? A beautiful wedding dress? A pavlova with perfect peaks? That delicious dessert lends its name to a white paint colour for one brand! Other names of white paint include snowflake, moon shimmer, cliff walk, salt, blank canvas, frosted dawn. The imagery is strong! But you canât pick a paint colour just because you like the name or the imagery behind it. When it comes to choosing white paint, you really are spoilt for choice. But that choice may seem overwhelming, and according to Farrow & Ball, âWhite is never just white.â So how can we make informed choices when we want to use white paint in our homes. Well there are two important things to consider. The first is the lighting within the room, and the second is the undertone in the paint. These two factors need to be weighed up together. Let me give you some examples. If your room is south facing, it will have a lot of warm, natural light coming through the window. If you want to achieve a pure white on your walls, you should choose a white paint which has cool, blue undertones, because the cool paint, paired with the warm light, gives you a happy equilibrium. If you were to take that same paint and use it in a north facing room, it will feel cold and err towards blue, because the blue undertone plus cool, northern light will only ever give you a cold feel. That doesnât mean you canât use white in a north facing room, just choose a white paint with warm, yellow undertones â that way it will balance out the northern light, and give you a fresh, clean look, without feeling too cold. If your room faces east or west, the lighting changes throughout the day, so think about when in the day you are most using that room and apply the same principles. âHow do I look for the undertone?!â Good question! It really isnât as complicated as you might think. The best thing to do is compare your paint sample to a simple piece of white A4 paper. If it looks blue compared to the paper, you know if has blue undertones. If the paint looks like itâs heading towards pink, it has red undertones. And if it is looking creamy, then the undertone is yellow. Allow me for one moment to get scientific. Thereâs actually no such thing as just white. White is all colours. White is simply the lightest shade of a colour. So the very very lightest pink will appear âwhiteâ, but so will the lightest grey, the lightest yellow and the lightest blue. You get the point. But this is actually really helpful to bear in mind when youâre choosing your âwhiteâ paint!
- Christmas Decorations
Ah Christmas decorations! What are your Christmas decorations like? Are you someone who likes traditional combinations of gold and red, or gold and silver? Maybe you favour the Scandi style of decorations: raw wood and felt, and lots of white with red and green. Or are you one for total full on kitsch with an eclectic mix of bright and bold colours and humorous baubles. When Nick and I were first married we had new sets of Christmas tree decorations, different shapes and styles, but all gold and red. It was a classic look and very sophisticated. 17 Christmases later, we still have those original decorations, and use them each year, but our collection has grown and I have inflicted my more eclectic colour scheme on my family. I say colour scheme, but really there is no colour scheme! Each year the collection has grown as the children have made things and weâve been gifted decorations. I also love scouring the charity shops in December to find second hand baubles. And then thereâs the tradition of buying one new decoration each yearâŠ.As you can imagine, we now have rather a lot of Christmas tree decorations and far from being sophisticated, our tree is a happy, eclectic mix of all sorts! I love it! Then thereâs the lights. Cool white? Warm white? Coloured lights? Blue? (No thanks.) When I was growing up it was always warm white lights on the tree and coloured lights elsewhere in the house â round a doorway or going up the stairs. And we have maintained that tradition. The warm glow of Christmas lights brings cheer doesnât it? Whether youâre inside cosying up with a film, or walking along the dark streets enjoying the lights in windows and on the outsides of houses. It makes us feel good. Whatever your style of Christmas dĂ©cor â minimal or all out maximal, or somewhere in between, I hope you enjoy this opportunity to bring some colour joy into your home! Happy Christmas!
- Why colour?
âWhy are you so interested in paint colours? Whatâs so bad about just having white or grey everywhere?â This is the question that was recently put to me. And itâs a good question! Why all the obsession with choosing the right colours for our home interiors â whatâs wrong with the neutrals? Well, the short answer is nothing! Nothingâs wrong with choosing whites or greys â if you like them and they really work for you in your home. But for many, we reach for those paint tins because of habit, or we donât know where else to begin with choosing a different colour. I want to challenge that thinking. There is a whole world of colour out there! But itâs far from simple. I canât just give you a magic formula and say that green works best in dining rooms, yellow in kitchens and blue in bedrooms. Thatâs because we all respond to colours in different ways. It is such a personal thing. So I might see a particular shade of green as cosy and relaxing, but someone else might find it much too dark and draining. Thatâs where really exploring your own personality and style comes in to play. Iâm sure many will have heard of colour consultants who will advise you on the colours to wear to bring out the best of your skin tone, eye colour and hair colouring. Well, a similar principle applies when we think about using colour in our homes. Get it wrong and your home could leave you feeling flat, unmotivated and unable to relax, but get it right, and your home will support your personality and be a place where you can relax and feel cosy, or feel energised and motivated, depending on the room and its function.   So to go back to the original question, âWhy use colour?â The answer is because using colour makes us feel good! Picking different colours for different rooms and using them carefully and with consideration will make our homes feel  wonderful.