According to the interior design experts, these colors will be dominating the scene in 2017. Grab a brush and change it up , bring some new color into your life.
Windsor Pink
Dubbed “millennial pink” by The Cut, the peach-salmon hybrid refuses to go away. “Not too juvenile or too twee or too sweet, it acts like a neutral,” says designer Lisa Tharp.
Salsa Dancing
Pantone named “Autumn Maple” as one of its top shades for (surprise, surprise) autumn, but the fall hue looks fresh year-round. A similar burnt orange spices up this kitchen by Melanie Coddington.
Inner Glow
Sunny rooms are trending again. “Yellows, from pale butters to dark mustard, are cropping up everywhere,” says Stephanie Piece, MasterBrand Cabinets’ director of design and trends. Carry it from the walls to the furniture, like this suburban kitchen by Lindsey Coral Harper.
Courtyard Green
Deep emerald isn’t going anywhere. “This bluegrass green is on the floors of Monticello — and at my 1688 country home,” says designer Jeffrey Bilhuber. “It’s a color steeped in history, but also of the moment. To me, that’s perfection.”
Oval Room Blue
The presidential election may be over, but the Oval Room can inspire change in more ways than one. “I call this blue my miracle worker — nothing bests it if you need fast drama,” says designer Lauren McGrath. No wonder this shade looks right at home in our kitchen of the year.
Greenery
Pantone’s color of the year brings to mind the outdoors, but it works inside too. For a high-impact entry, designer Christina Murphy Pisa turned to a similar shade. “This acidic apple green, which is sophisticated but not too serious, nails it,” she says.
Stone White
If sunlight is hard to come by, fake it via paint color. “Not every room can have a dozen windows. When there’s only one, like in the dining room of this Spanish-style home, you have to emphasize it,” says designer Christine Markatos Lowe.
Dusk
Fact: You can never have too much blue. “Although this blue is about as scary as a Smurf, it frightened my clients,” says Melanie Turner. “Fully committing to the color for the cabinets and the walls was the trick to changing their minds.
Black Chiffon
Black built-ins are popping up everywhere lately, like in this study by Carmel Greer. “This gray-black reminds me of shadows — for me, that’s a good thing,” she says. “With the gold overhead light and leather chair, it’s tailored and masculine, not cave-like.”
Poised Taupe
Sherwin-Williams predicts grays will warm up after a half-decade of cool tones: Poised Taupe took their title of 2017 Color of the Year. “It’s like gray and brown had a baby,” Sue Wadden, Sherwin-Williams’ director of color marketing, told the Today show.
To learn about more color trends and their descriptions/best uses – follow link below