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Little Greene Colour Board 118
This is one of my favourite colour schemes, created using Little Greene paints. It shows perfectly how colours from opposite ends of the spectrum can work together. There are two blues, a gorgeous orange-brown, and two warm, earthy neutrals to tie it all together. This palette can be used in different ways, depending on how much colour you would like on your walls and how much you would like as an accent. This is a good scheme to use throughout a whole house - see our Colour Connections section and “Home Colour 7”. Images from @littlegreene and @claire.moran.designs.
Our advice is - always check your colour choice, firstly on your Farrow & Ball or Little Greene colour card, and then with a sample pot. Colours can look different, depending on the aspect of your room and various lighting situations. Paint your sample pot onto a large piece of card, or on the back of a wallpaper cut off. Paint one coat, let it dry, then paint another - you will then have a true representation of the colour. Move your paper paint sample around the room, tack it to different walls, look at the colour in different lighting conditions and at different times of the day.
We also kindly ask you not to share any details of the colours on Social Media - we are a small company and would like to keep our Colour Boards within our domain - whilst sharing them with you!
This is one of my favourite colour schemes, created using Little Greene paints. It shows perfectly how colours from opposite ends of the spectrum can work together. There are two blues, a gorgeous orange-brown, and two warm, earthy neutrals to tie it all together. This palette can be used in different ways, depending on how much colour you would like on your walls and how much you would like as an accent. This is a good scheme to use throughout a whole house - see our Colour Connections section and “Home Colour 7”. Images from @littlegreene and @claire.moran.designs.
Our advice is - always check your colour choice, firstly on your Farrow & Ball or Little Greene colour card, and then with a sample pot. Colours can look different, depending on the aspect of your room and various lighting situations. Paint your sample pot onto a large piece of card, or on the back of a wallpaper cut off. Paint one coat, let it dry, then paint another - you will then have a true representation of the colour. Move your paper paint sample around the room, tack it to different walls, look at the colour in different lighting conditions and at different times of the day.
We also kindly ask you not to share any details of the colours on Social Media - we are a small company and would like to keep our Colour Boards within our domain - whilst sharing them with you!