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Interior Design Color Psychology

November 1, 2017 By //  by Magdalena Brandon

WHAT COLORS SPEAK TO YOU?

It’s easy to pick a favorite color for your rooms. For the visual tension that makes things interesting, however, a single color isn’t always enough. Mixing colors takes some skill, but it shouldn’t intimidate. Begin with your favorite color, then use the simple color wheel lessons on the next few pages to find compatible accents for it. For starters, you can prevent color clashes with a palette from one of four color groups: primary, secondary, tertiary, and monochromatic.

Color Wheel palette to demonstrate interior design color psychology

A STRONG FOUNDATION: PRIMARY COLORS

For rooms that come off feeling strong and solid, a scheme of primary colors – red, blue, and yellow – is an ideal choice. Each is a pure color that can’t be created by mixing other hues. Use them in pairs or combine all three; they work equally in country, traditional, and modern rooms.

THE NEXT STEP: SECONDARY COLORS

Secondary colors – green, orange, and purple – are created by mixing two primaries in equal amounts. Green is made from blue and yellow, orange from yellow and red, and purple from red and blue. Like all colors, each secondary hue can be tinted with white or shaded with black for variations. If you can’t envision a bold orange and green room, think about pairing up their paler tints of peach and sage. The primary and secondary colors illustrate that you can make a compatible triadic scheme by choosing any three colors equidistant on the wheel.

INTERMEDIATE PLAYERS: TERTIARY COLORS

These colors are an equal mix of a primary plus its closest secondary color: blue-green, yellow-green, red-orange, red-purple, and blue-purple.

SINGLE-SHOT COLOR: MONOCHROMATIC

What prevents a monochromatic scheme from being bland is subtle variation of a single color’s intensity. For instance, orange, coral, peach offer variety within the same family.

COLOR PSYCHOLOGY – HOW COLOR AFFECTS YOUR MOOD

The colors you live with really do influence your emotions. Some palettes lighten and brighten your mood, and others pacify or purify. We respond to color with our hearts, not just our heads, so it’s important to choose wisely. Understand that colors behave in three basic ways- active, passive, and neutral – and you can easily match every room’s colors to your personal desires and taste, and to how you intend to use the room.

ACTIVE COLORS

On the warm side of the color wheel, active colors include yellow, orange, and red. Extroverts, these advancing hues step out in the room to greet and sometimes dominate. They inspire conversation and an upbeat attitude. Red, the most intense, pumps the adrenaline like no other hue. Small doses of the fire engine hue wake up an entry or turn up the heat on a hearthside den. Golden or lemony yellows-good for home offices and kitchens-unleash creative juices.

PASSIVE COLORS

The cool color – blue, green, and purple – will pacify, staying quietly in the background to calm and restore depleted spirits. They’re ideal for bedrooms or private retreats, but if yours is a cold climate, you may want to work in some decidedly sunny accents for warmth and contrast.

NEUTRAL COLORS

Neutralizers are the “uncolors” – browns, beiges, grays, whites, and taupes. They neither activate nor pacify but combine and cooperate, bridging together different rooms and colors. They’re good transitions on woodwork, trim, hallways, and functional spaces such as kitchens and baths, but even living rooms can benefit. Darker neutrals tone down other colors; crisp white intensifies them.

COLOR LANGUAGE

*Pink: soothes, acquiesces; promotes affability and affection.
*Yellow: expands, cheers; increases energy.
*White: purifies, energizes, unifies; in combination, enlivens all other colors.
*Black: disciplines, authorizes, strengthens; encourages independence.
*Orange: cheers, commands; stimulates appetites, conversation, and charity.
*Red: empowers, stimulates, dramatizes, competes; symbolizes passion.
*Green: balances, normalizes, refreshes; encourages emotional growth.
*Purple: comforts, spiritualizes; creates mystery and draws out intuition.
*Blue: relaxes, refreshes, cools; produces tranquil feelings and peaceful moods.

If you’ve got any color questions, feel free to contact me thru http://www.magdalenasvegas.com/

 

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Magdalena Brandon
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Magdalena Brandon
Owner at Magdalena’s Harmonious Design
Magdalena is a Feng Shui expert and owns Magdalena’s Harmonious Design, a full-service Interior Design firm. She is also an MMS Certified Coach and founded LVEWN in 2013.
Magdalena Brandon
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Latest posts by Magdalena Brandon (see all)
  • Interior Design Color Psychology - November 1, 2017
  • Room Arranging 101 - February 29, 2016
  • Feng Shui and Why It is Good for You – Part One - November 17, 2015

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Filed Under: Interior Design [post_tags}

About Magdalena Brandon

Magdalena is a Feng Shui expert and owns Magdalena’s Harmonious Design, a full-service Interior Design firm. She is also an MMS Certified Coach and founded LVEWN in 2013.

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