Protek Painting is proud to provide free color matching and color consulting on every paint job.
We will gladly sit with you and go through your paint color options to ensure that you’ll be happy with the final result. We are the professionals and we are here to help you make that choice; we want your home to look as beautiful as you do – our name is on the finished product. And if you have existing colors you want us to match, we will be able to do that for free.
One of the things you can do to start visualizing your project is to try out some of the fun online color tools. For example, here is one from Sherwin Williams.
Some other things you can start to do, are:
Exterior Color Selection:
- Get a color deck or color swatches.
- Begin with colors suggested by your roof and masonry.
- Consider the color schemes used inside your home. Exterior colors should harmonize with the interior.
- Don’t clash with your neighbors! Choose colors that coordinate with the buildings around you.
- To emphasize architectural details, outline them with an accent color that contrasts with the background.
- Use darker colors to emphasize shadows and lighter colors to show projections.
- Avoid extreme contrasts. Choose colors that are related.
- Study color samples outside, but never in direct sunlight. Bright sun will distort the color.
- Always go with what you are drawn to and what you like.
Interior Color selection:
- Think About Your Mood. When selecting a color, consider the mood of a room. In a bedroom do you want the feeling to be restful and soothing or dramatic and intimate? Soft, cool colors and neutrals usually create a quieter feeling while stronger colors are for drama. Do you want a dining area to feel sociable and stimulating or appear formal and quiet? Warmer, contrasting and somewhat brighter colors add to a sociable atmosphere; deeper blue-greens and neutrals will give a more formal ambiance. Do you want kid’s rooms to create an active and exciting energy or an orderly and restful feeling? Be careful not to overstimulate your children with intensely bright hues. You may not know it, but some brighter colors can lead to unrest and irritability.
- Pay Attention to Lighting. The reason why paint stores have light boxes for you to test paint chips:?- Natural daylight shows the truest color;?- Incandescent lighting brings out warm tones and yellows;?- Fluorescent lighting casts a sharp blue tone.?So, a strong color might be too bright and overpowering when used on all walls or next to a large window, but it might be effective when used as an accent wall with indirect light.
- Learn the Color Terms. It helps to understand the terminology used to describe color.?- Hue is what we call a color. Red is the hue; blue is the hue.?- The value of the hue is how light or dark it is.?- Saturation refers to how dominant the hue is. As we go from red to pink, the red hue becomes less dominant.?- Intensity is the brilliance of the color. The pure colors such as red are more intense than the combined colors such as yellow-green. A stronger intense color usually has a more dominant hue.?If you want a more active space, consider introducing stronger, more intense color. Even if you want a light-colored room, choose colors that are slightly more saturated than off-white or light pastel. Very light color can feel bright and stark when it appears on all surfaces in a room. However, two or more medium-light, closely related pastel colors can create a luminous effect when used in the same room.
- Test Your Color Choice. Boost your confidence by testing colors on poster board or large areas of a wall. Don’t be afraid to go beyond your comfort zone: Consider strong, vivid colors or soft, deep neutrals like chocolate brown or olive green as main or accent colors. Or add drama with a stronger color on the ceiling. Tinted ceilings can dramatically change the whole look of a room.
- Add Depth With Decorative Finishes. Transform flat, dull walls into interesting and personal spaces with subtle or dramatic visual texture and broken color. Burnished mineral/metal finishes and layered colored glazes add depth. Some examples of softly reflective metals are mica, copper, pewter, bronze and, of course, antiqued silver and gold.
- Walk Into Another Room. Consider walls as planes of color, and see how they interact when viewing one next to the other in adjacent rooms. Approach it like a composition: You’re in one room, but you’re going to see a piece of another room through it. So as you’re choosing colors, consider how they will flow from room to room to create your picture.
- Follow the Color Wheel. A small color wheel is a great reference tool for modifying and intensifying two or more colors. For example, red and green, which are complementary (opposite) colors, are most intense when used together. You may be surprised at how many combinations function beautifully together, and you may even become attracted to entirely new color palettes. The color wheel also illustrates the visual temperature of a color. Draw a line from the yellow-green mark on the color wheel all the way down to the red-violet; you’ll see that all the colors on the left are warm and the colors on the right are cool.
- Play Up Monochromatic Schemes. Think one color is boring? Create bold or subtle variations within one color group with contrasting paint finishes. For example, use closely related colors, or try a single color in different finishes, for walls and trim in one space.
- Choose Different Paint Finishes. A single color used on walls and trim takes on new significance when applied in different finishes. For example, wall and trim colors can remain the same hue, but use an eggshell (matte and less reflective) finish on walls and a satin or semigloss on trim. The color will appear slightly different on each surface.