Q: Hi guys! I was snooping around your blog to try and find a floor plan of your new home with the colors you used for each room (like you did in the post from Feb 24/2010) but I didn’t find one! I would L-O-V-E to see what your new house looks like now, with a visualization of the color scheme per room. Is this possible, or am I asking way too much? HAPPY NEW YEAR by the way! – Danielle
A: Oh yeah – we’re way overdue on that! So when Danielle submitted that comment here, we officially bumped it to the top of our to-do list. We did one of them for our first house, and it was fun to see how our paint colors have evolved over the years. So without further ado, here’s our current house’s color palette as it stands now (we still have to paint the guest bathroom and the spare room). It’s not too easy to see all of the colors (ex: the back of the dining room built-ins are dark teal, but it’s not as easy to see those little slivers of color in the image below as well as the office stencil and Clara’s closet stencil) but it was fun to play around in photoshop and make an updated floor plan for this house’s paint picks so far. Note: click here for a full list of these paint colors.
The cool thing we’ve realized is that most of our rooms with brightly colored walls tend to have a few more neutral choices to balance things out (ex: our greeny-yellow walled kitchen has white cabinets/counters and a soft gray backsplash with brown cork floors). And our rooms with more neutral colors on the walls tend have more color added in with brightly patterned curtains & pillows, geometric rugs and bold art, painted furniture, etc. But we’ll get to that a little more in a second.
First, just for fun, here’s our first house’s color palette. We still seem to love blues and greens with a fair amount of neutral tones, but we traded in the creams and tans for soft and taupey grays and added plums, pinks, and warm yellow-y green to keep it from feeling too cold. We’ll always have a special place in our hearts for the “sea glass” colors of our first house though. Especially in a smaller home with some pretty tiny rooms, keeping things flow-y and neutral was really helpful when it came to making it feel open and airy. Our current house is larger, so a few hits of color among the other more toned down walls make us happy (and don’t seem to chop things up as much as they could in a smaller floor plan).
We’ve actually seen lots of pretty homes with the same exact color on every wall of the entire house (whether it’s a crisp white tone, a soft tan color, a taupey-gray, or even something more daring like celery, yellow, or a muted blue-gray tone everywhere). Meanwhile we’ve also seen a ton of gorgeous homes with a different paint color in every single room. We tend to fall right in the middle of that spectrum, preferring to use a handful of colors in a few different spaces.
I think we like to reference a few over-arching wall colors in a few different places just so there’s some sort of flow and relation among the spaces, but not too much straight up cloning going on (thanks to varying other items like rugs, art, pillows, curtain fabrics, etc). For example, we have the same soft grey tone on the walls in our living room and our dining room, but the dining room has deep teal paint on the back of the built-ins to differentiate it, and also has colorful curtains and a bright yellow door…
… meanwhile the living room has a green geometric rug, colorful pillows, and softer tone-on-tone curtains with dark painted beams. So we’ve found that in rooms where we have softer or more neutral walls we layer in more patterns and colors than the rooms with brighter walls (like our kitchen).
Maybe the biggest change? Our first house had white curtains in every. single. room. except for Clara’s bedroom. So one major difference here has been that we’ve embraced more colorful and patterned curtains in nearly every room.
Bold color was definitely less present in our first house. Comparing our color-coded floor plans above might make that pretty clear, but it’s even more evident when you actually look at room shots. While our first living room was softly layered with tone on tone colors…
… our current living room (the pic above this one) definitely has more pattern and color going on (bright pillows and vases, a larger geometric rug, etc) as well as more high contrast choices (dark beams and a dark sofa).
Another place we tend to bring bright color into our current house would be art and painted furnishings. See how the green chairs and bright wall of art in the office really liven things up? Yet we have neutral tones in there to add balance, like the white cabinets, wood counter, and natural jute rug.
And of course things like the homemade headboard in our bedroom – and guest bedroom – add some interest, pattern, and color along with a few more bold and geometric rugs:
The green headboard from our guest room above was also in our first guest room, so we were inching towards our current color preferences back then, but we definitely kept it more toned down in there with neutral tan walls, plain white roman shades, no rug, etc.
Just for fun, here’s a picture of our first bedroom to compare with our current bedroom shot three pictures up. It appears as though our love of cozy bedrooms has remained (especially with pretty chandeliers and breezy white curtains) but we’ve definitely turned up the dial with brighter pillows, a patterned headboard, and a bold rug in our current house.
We still have moments of calm tone-on-tone color here though, just to balance those hits of bright hue that occur almost everywhere else. For example, there’s our sink nook…
… and our hallway of frames…
… and our laundry room. There’s some soft avocado color on the walls, but the rest of the room is pretty neutral (white cabinets and shelves, a natural-toned light fixture, white appliances, cork floors, etc) since it’s such a small space and we didn’t want it to feel cramped.
Actually if you look back at the commonalities among those three spaces that I just mentioned, they’re all small – so I think that’s definitely a factor when it comes to how much color and pattern we add. And then there are rooms that are a bit larger, like the hall bathroom, which got a plum undertone in the grey paint (it’s subtle but definitely noticeable in person) and some bright art along with a colorful window treatment and some teal knobs on the vanity.
So there you have it, a meandering brain dump with a much overdue floor plan of our house’s color palette. It’s nice to stop and examine these things occasionally because then we can look back on them (posts like this are essentially a time capsule for us, since pages like our House Tour are constantly being updated – so all the in-the-middle stuff gets bumped out). Welcome to our time capsule.
How do you guys like to decorate? Do you prefer one or two paint colors throughout your entire home? A different color in every room? Or a handful of colors that reoccur in a few places? There’s definitely not one right answer, so we’d love to hear how you guys like to color your world!
Psst- For a more exhaustive tour of our first house followed by all of the before & afters of our current house, click here and then here.
Steve says
In the above photo with the black beams (http://images.younghouselove.com.s3.amazonaws.com/2012/12/TVConsole-After-1-Full-Room.jpg), is there a way to make them where no are exposed? Sort of like just mounting 2x4s or something along the drywall/stud seams. Love the dark beam and framing. Any ideas?
YoungHouseLove says
Hmm, I bet you could mount wood like 2 x 4s into the studs. Anyone have tips for Steve?
xo
s
Bethany says
Gotta say, I love how that pic of the two of you guys working away in the office looks like it is taken by Clara! Cracks me up!
Patricia Smith says
I have been looking to paint several rooms in mu home and have considered at gray/blue scheme but have been afraid it would be depressing on a cloudy day. See you have used grays, any thoughts?
YoungHouseLove says
Just add white and pops of color and it’s cheerful!
xo,
s
Trisha D. says
It definitely helps me to have the floor plan as a reference point when browsing through posts. I’,m eally digging the colored layout.
I was just referencing your outdoor layout for inspiration to our outdoor footprint. I recently posted the entire house and property floor plan here: http://www.blackandwhiteobsession.blogspot.com/2013/01/our-home-original-floor-plan_15.html.
Love the post and its encouraging to know that everyone has different paint perspectives- neutral, sporadic, etc.
YoungHouseLove says
Fun!
xo,
s
Lyn says
Love the update. What program did you use to make the floorplan. I think I’d like to make a floorplan of my house just for the fun of it, cuz I’m geeky like that.
YoungHouseLove says
That was photoshop, but floorplanner.com is helpful too!
xo
s
bfish says
I’ve always liked a lot of color and use it as much as I can — and not wimpy colors either. Also we go for a high-contrast look, but pull everything together with white trim (except cream trim in dining room). With all of this going on, the way to go is to repeat some colors in furnishings and rugs from room to room so that it isn’t too disjointed. It may not look like it, but there’s a method to our madness.
Jackie says
I am so happy that you did this! I’ve been waiting for it. Your colors are gorgeous. We just bought a new house- though it has recently been painted the colors just aren’t us. Definitely going to be taking some inspiration from yours. Thanks for sharing your home (so meticulously) with all of us!
YoungHouseLove says
You’re welcome Jackie! Good luck with everything!
xo
s
Chrissy says
This is interesting to see, and helpful to have as a reference! I love the look and feel of both houses, and it’s so smart to step back and think about how color choices flow throughout an entire home.
Unrelatedly, my random shopping find of the day was a white ceramic chihuahua stamp, which obviously made me think of you guys: http://www.anthropologie.com/anthro/product/home-office/F25682014.jsp
YoungHouseLove says
Love it!
xo,
s
Cindy says
I love this idea with the floor plan! Living in the Pacific Northwest, I can’t bring myself to paint any of my walls grey- it’s just too grey outside… I’ve gone for a differnt color, and sometimes multiple colors in each room. My living and dining rooms are pumpkin orange, except for one dining room wall, which is Vine Tomato red. The kitchen walls are Vine Tomato, while the cabinet bases are a dark grey and the door and drawer fronts are Poetic Purple. The bedroom is Cactus Garden green with green and purple textiles. The bathroom is a dark peacock blue above bright white beadbord. The hallway is a soft gold with leftover blue paint on the ceiling. I haven’t gotten to the back of the house yet, but I’m thinking leftover blue in the laundry room, leftover purple in the walk-in closet, and maybe celery green for the second bedroom. It sounds absolutely psychotic typed out, but honest, it somehow works!
YoungHouseLove says
It actually sounds really vibrant and cool!
xo
s
Stacey says
I am loving that blue and gray rug for my bedroom – where did you get it?????
YoungHouseLove says
That was a local outlet find here in Richmond from a place called The Decorating Outlet. Hope it helps!
xo
s