Notice the Kitchen Ceiling is in the Same Color Family as the Walls Outside of the Kitchen Area
They've provided Continuity by Bringing the Main Room Colors into the Kitchen Design
Photo Via Pixabay |
Most newer homes are designed so the main rooms combine or flow directly into one another. Although popular, deciding how to create a cohesive color scheme can be challenging.
Here are Three Tips to Review:
1. Choose Your "Neutral Color" and Use it On All the Rooms that Open to Each Other
A neutral color shouldn't be white, beige, gray, or tan. We think of ' light ' colors when we think about a neutral color. However, your neutral color can also be bold.
The main tip in choosing your base color is to use it on all the rooms that flow together in an open area.
Once you've established your base neutral, you're free to create separations in the space using elements or furnishings in the room.
For example, if a living room opens up to the kitchen, establish your base color for the walls in both rooms, then define the spaces using color in other décor aspects. The couches could be lighter and more neutral with darker walls, while the countertops could be darker if the kitchen cupboards were lighter.
Once you establish a base color for the walls and floors, the rest of the room becomes an effort to match and bind the elements together.
2. If You Prefer Different Wall Colors in Each of the Defined Spaces that are Open to Each Other, Choose Colors in the Same Color Family or Color Temperature
If choosing just one color flowing between your open space rooms is not to your liking, consider choosing colors in the same tones.
For example, choose a darker shade of a particular color for one aspect of the room and a lighter shade of the same color for the other open area.
Remember the ceiling. Rather than going with a standard white ceiling, depending on the design of your room, you could use an even lighter shade of your chosen color for the ceiling.
3. When You're Not Sure Whether a Room Flows from One to Another
One of the difficult things people find about an open-concept space is that the rooms are available to each other.
In other words, a room is open to another yet not visible from every angle, and thus, you're still determining if it's considered a separate space.
The solution to this is 'Sightlines". Stand in a room, determine what other rooms can be seen when you're in it, and repeat this for all rooms. If there's an open connection to another room, you must be cognizant of color flow.
If you're standing in a room and the only way you can see another room is through a door, that doesn't count as 'open to the other space.' It doesn't mean you should go hog-wild with color differentials; it merely means you're not obligated to consider the flow as carefully as you would with adjoining rooms.
The bottom line is don't be afraid of color. Take your time to determine how your rooms connect, then decide what system works best for your open-concept spaces, such as one color connecting all walls or shades in the same family.
Here are Three Tips to Review:
1. Choose Your "Neutral Color" and Use it On All the Rooms that Open to Each Other
A neutral color shouldn't be white, beige, gray, or tan. We think of ' light ' colors when we think about a neutral color. However, your neutral color can also be bold.
The main tip in choosing your base color is to use it on all the rooms that flow together in an open area.
Once you've established your base neutral, you're free to create separations in the space using elements or furnishings in the room.
For example, if a living room opens up to the kitchen, establish your base color for the walls in both rooms, then define the spaces using color in other décor aspects. The couches could be lighter and more neutral with darker walls, while the countertops could be darker if the kitchen cupboards were lighter.
Once you establish a base color for the walls and floors, the rest of the room becomes an effort to match and bind the elements together.
Notice the Wall Color Between the Two Spaces is the Same
Check out the Ceilings - Because of the Dividing White Beam, a Different Ceiling Color Works
Photo Via Pixabay |
If choosing just one color flowing between your open space rooms is not to your liking, consider choosing colors in the same tones.
For example, choose a darker shade of a particular color for one aspect of the room and a lighter shade of the same color for the other open area.
Remember the ceiling. Rather than going with a standard white ceiling, depending on the design of your room, you could use an even lighter shade of your chosen color for the ceiling.
As an example, in a living room kitchen combined space, you could use a dark grey for the living room walls and two shades down for the kitchen color. For the shared ceiling between the two spaces, bring the grey even lighter, perhaps four shades down from the darkest shade you've selected. With this example, you've stayed in the grey family, yet provided distinctive color differences between the two rooms and tied them together using the ceiling.With a cohesive floor and ceiling flowing through the space, walls in the same tone but different in shade still work nicely without leaving one feeling overwhelmed.
This Design Opens to Several Rooms
They've used Various Shades in the Same Color Temperature to Create Cohesiveness and Separation - Photo Via Pixabay |
One of the difficult things people find about an open-concept space is that the rooms are available to each other.
In other words, a room is open to another yet not visible from every angle, and thus, you're still determining if it's considered a separate space.
The solution to this is 'Sightlines". Stand in a room, determine what other rooms can be seen when you're in it, and repeat this for all rooms. If there's an open connection to another room, you must be cognizant of color flow.
If you're standing in a room and the only way you can see another room is through a door, that doesn't count as 'open to the other space.' It doesn't mean you should go hog-wild with color differentials; it merely means you're not obligated to consider the flow as carefully as you would with adjoining rooms.
The bottom line is don't be afraid of color. Take your time to determine how your rooms connect, then decide what system works best for your open-concept spaces, such as one color connecting all walls or shades in the same family.
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