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A Home Painter’s Color Decorating Tutorial

Posted by Jade Martins on Feb-16-2010

This is the one you were dreading, isn’t it? Mention decorating with color, and you have conjured these pictures of an interior decorator flouncing around your abode waving a waif-wristed hand at the walls. “Honey, a chiffon lemon base with saffron trim when you’re obviously a fall person? O, look, you’ve wrecked your fung shui!” In a world where we’re not always sure if this tie goes with this jacket, we have to now pick colors for our house which, barring tornadoes, we will have to live with for a decade or two. One wrong color choice and Martha Stewart will be ringing your doorbell at six AM Sunday to whack you with a copy of “Better Homes and Gardens”.

What the experts don’t tell you is that color palettes are actually very easy to learn and, in spite of their apparent inscrutability, actually have set rules to follow!

The Color Scheme Families
There’s just four of them: Primary, secondary, tertiary, and monotone. Every color scheme you can find in the world fits into one of these four families.

The primary colors, as we leaned in grade school, are red, blue, and yellow. They are the only pure hues, and all of the other colors come from different mixtures of these three. Primary colors add a bold accent, but are overwhelming in strong doses.

The secondary colors are green, orange, and purple. They’re ‘secondary’ because they’re what you get when you mix two of the primary colors together in equal amounts. Secondary colors in broad splashes are even more striking than primary colors, but in restraint are a gentler accent.

Tertiary colors are the same rule we used to get secondary colors, but this time we’re using every color we can get from pairs of primary and secondary colors. So where the first two had three colors each, the tertiary colors get six: blue-green, green-yellow, yellow-orange, orange-red, red-purple, and purple-blue. Tertiary colors aren’t quite so powerful, and are seldom used for accents.

We could actually go on and on mixing these colors to make fourth and fifth and so on, but they figured to stop here before it got too complicated.

The last of the four color schemes is monochrome. A monochromatic color scheme pairs one color with only white or another neutral.

The Color Moods

Of course, we’re not speaking of the colors themselves having moods, but the moods which are evoked in you, the viewer. If you’re looking at a color and asking “What mood? It’s blue; am I supposed to feel sad?” just go along with the silly people who feel emotions from colors. Honestly, there are people who react from them and we’d better go along with what they say. It’s like long division; you may not understand the process but you know you’ll get an answer from the formula. However, it has been established that different people don’t react with the same intensity to color schemes – but all react in the same kind of mood.

The three moods are active, passive, and neutral.

Active colors are also called warm colors and they’re all the hues of yellow, orange, and red. These colors are energetic and inspire action and alertness. Red is the ‘panic color’, the one that gets all the attention. Yellow and orange are ‘sunny’ and are good for inspiration and cheerfulness.

The passive colors are also called cool colors and they’re all the hues of blue, green, and purple. These pacify, staying quietly in the background to calm and restore the mood. Green and blue are the natural and serene colors, while purple is just a little bit edgy.

Neutrals are brown, beige, gray, white, and black. As suggested, they mute and restrain, helping other colors blend in to each other or having a low impact effect on their own. Now, you might say “But brown is just a kind of dark yellow-orange, isn’t that a warm, active color?” Yes, you’re right about the dark yellow-orange. But it’s neutral, because it’s the color of the Earth.

Now, along with all of the above, here comes some general rules of thumb about colors and the mood characteristics of each one. You may feel more or less strongly about the colors’ effects, but remember that if you treat color combinations as if these color moods made sense, you will get a complimentary color palette out of it. To make the color’s effect stronger, use a darker shade of it; to lessen it’s effect, use a lighter shade.

Red: empowers, stimulates, and dramatizes; symbolizes passion. The color of fire, stop signs, and Valentine’s hearts.

Pink: soothes; promotes affability and affection. The friendly snugly color. Every now and then you see jails and mental hospitals painted with pink interiors, because it pacifies the residents.

Yellow: expands, cheers, and empowers; increases energy. The color of gold. The color of avarice and ambition.

White: purifies, energizes, unifies; complementary in combination with other colors. Makes spaces feel bigger and seem brighter.

Black: disciplines, authorizes, strengthens; also encourages independence. But too much of it has a depressing, drab effect. It also makes interior space feel smaller, which is why you almost never see black or dark gray interior walls.

Orange: cheers, commands; stimulates conversation, and charity. Orange is also known to stimulate the appetite, which is why most fast food logos are orange (golden arches, for instance).

Green: balances, normalizes, refreshes; encourages growth. Notice how many schools and universities favor green interiors.

Purple: comforts, imbues with a soul; creates mystery and draws out intuition. Purple and violet hues are found wherever there’s a mystic or artistic person that had a say in the decorating.

Blue: relaxes, refreshes, cools; produces tranquil feelings and peaceful moods. Another institutional color; pale blue has nearly the same effect as pink.

Now then, that was your crash course in color scheming. To test your knowledge, try imagining making a statement with different color palettes for different uses. Do you want your home to feel like a warm, rustic haven? Use, reds, oranges, and yellows together with neutral browns. Is your home a meditative retreat to restore and renew? Blues and greens, with neutral whites. Decorating a home office? Gold and green for keeping a mood of wealth and growth, with black for the neutral accent to keep you disciplined.

Now, like astrology, this is a science built around how it’s supposed to work. It doesn’t work for everybody, and even the stronger attempt to regulate mood by color will have less impact on the observer than, say, whether you’re hungry right now. But you at least know the theory behind all the fancy talk.

Josh Stone
http://www.articlesbase.com/home-and-family-articles/a-home-painters-color-decorating-tutorial-72642.html

moving home with a toddler?

Posted by Jade Martins on Feb-16-2010

any tips on how to make this an easy transition for my 18 month old girl? we arent moving out of town just to a different part, just the house will be dfferent. how did your toddler take to their new room? any tips?

also any tips on keeping her occupied whilst i do the decorating etc? im also a single parent so i have no help in this or anyone to watch her:) thanks!!

I moved when Bella was 14 months, I am also single and I didn’t have anyone to watch her. I did, however, have some vacation days. Because of that I took 2 days off and moved midweek while she was at daycare. Day 1 was moving, day 2 was unpacking and shopping

The way it worked out, she left for school from one home and came home that night to the new place. She loved the new place and spent the first few days exploring and playing in boxes.

She even adjusted very well to her new room, sleeping in there the 2nd night.

Good Luck and have fun with your move!!

I need help decorating a living room?

Posted by Jade Martins on Feb-15-2010

I have a very large living room and I love it but I am not sure how to decorate it and neither does my boyfriend. We really want to make this place our own but were not sure where to start. Oh and we are allowed to paint. My landlord does not care.
We want to create a very bright and inviting living room. We have people over a lot and party a lot so we want it to make people feel welcome and comfortable.
I am not sure what to do first and I am not sure what colors would be good. We are very unpicky people. We just really want it to look good. We do want it classy though because we want it to feel like home.
If you have any suggestions or comments, I would love to hear them. Or if you know of good webpages to go to for easy and simply projects to do and stuff like that I would apprechiate it. I am desperate because I have no idea what I am doing. Thank you!

Find your focal point – what do you want to emphasize – window/view, fireplace, archway; try to arrange your room to accent that view. Look in your closets to see what colors you are both drawn (sic) to. Use that as your base pallette. Mix textures and tones and prints in your soft goods to avoid going too feminine or too masculine. It also helps to go thru magazines and pick photos that you like, assemble a bunch and them and then determine what the commonalities are – style, color,etc.
Also consider dividing your room into 2 seating areas that can be pulled together for entertaining larger groups.
Have fun!

How to prepare for Ramadan….?

Posted by Jade Martins on Feb-14-2010

I wanted to know how I can prepare for Ramadan…meaning….

How does one decorate their home for it? My son is 2 and I want to slowly introduce him to Ramadan by more fun means such as decorating it and making it fun for him.

Also, can anyone give me some delicious easy recipes I can use to prepare when we eat our breakfast.

I’d really appreciate it all the help I can get. Please give me any advice where you used your imagination to make the holiday beautiful and fun for kids.

Salam. We should respond to the coming ramadan with happiness Marhaban ya ramadan.You must prepare for ramadan (1)Taking a bath and make sunnah praying of 2 raka’at a day before the starting of fasting (2)Asking for apologize to all family members,relatives and friends (3)Saying the niyyat or intention at night that you will perform the mandatory fasting during ramadan this year in the name of Allah(4)Cooking foods which are easy digested and have high nutrition for sahoor (early breakfast before fajr) and for breaking the fasting after maghrib.(5)Giving more sadaqah and infaq during ramadan because its reward will be doubled by Allah (6)Peforming taraweeh salat(prayer) intogetherness at the mosque at every night after isya continued with the Qur’an reciting and dzikir

Delay-busting Reminder Tips For Remodeling And Decorating

Posted by Jade Martins on Feb-13-2010

Before you dive into remodeling or decorating, it is a key move to assess the time frame the work will take. As you would expect, considering glitches such as weather, contractor delays, supplies availability, and potential hidden extra work is a smart, but often and underestimated planning step.

A sound start date hinges on whether you’re only decorating or, on a larger scale, remodeling. The former is more flexible as it mostly consists of sheltered, in-house duties only. If it’s the latter, weather alone may affect the work progress in quality, quantity and cost.

Unless it’s an emergency, plan for times when the weather is your friend, not a foe.

If you are remodeling and hiring for it, book your contractors early. That’s an overlooked planning step, but crucial for a successful remodeling. Once you have a contractor booked, stay in touch with each other to develop a continuing “touch-base” habit. Silence on either side, as in “not asking questions early and often”, may indeed create unnecessary delays and obstacles for either party. So ask when you need an answer; give one when the contractor calls you up and asks you.

At the beginning, get an estimated time window of project completion from your builder. Grab it and consider it a tentative time frame plus ADD some extra to allow for unforeseen delays.

Then, while staying f-l-e-x-i-b-l-e to everything that comes later, you may need to adjust the master plan to coordinate and fit everything else in. As changes to the master plan do pop up, their frequency usually shrinks with a detailed attention to scheduling of all tasks (as opposed to ignoring them).

If your needs are merely a question of decorating, the start and finish depend on you (if you are doing the job yourself).
You can decide when and where to start and how many tasks you need to finish at a time. And if you lag behind, you are in charge anyway. Keep a day timer handy, though, to see the project’s development at a glance. A written time-table reference alone may be a strong motivation boost for you to finish on time instead of taking it unnecessarily “extra easy” ;) .

Are you stuck for time to do-it-yourself, or do you doubt your own decorating abilities to get your house looking just the way you want it in the shortest and most productive time?

Then, give the decorating assignment over to a professional decorator, or an interior designer. All you’ll need to do is to coordinate your schedule with theirs (for they will need unrestricted access to the task areas in your home). Coordinating both schedules alone is worth it if it meant a shorter decorating time frame and a smaller bill at the end, isn’t it?

But don’t forget … Here again, you’ll need to look into the demand for interior designers and schedule your time based on their availability. If you want something done in time for the festive season, you might have to claw your way into their appointment books early. Besides, getting a whiz interior designer of your choice is what you want, too, right?

Ask for references. As well as getting comments about the contractors’ quality of work, ask extra questions about how timely they were as well. The comments may surprise you and lead you to a better contractor who values productive time as much as you do.

Have a plan “B and C”. It can happen that your first-choice builders and interior designers bail out (without warning) despite your best efforts. Keep calm. Make a careful second and even a third back up choice during your early planning stages to have alternatives. And always be prepared for the “unexpected” by staying flexible and resourceful.

Not only will your remodeling or decorating schedule be more on time, but you’ll be able to avoid extra expenses in time, money and frustrations. An early and extra attention to timing details may surprisingly keep you as calm as a sleeping puppy during the face lift of your home.

Lu Smith
http://www.articlesbase.com/home-improvement-articles/delaybusting-reminder-tips-for-remodeling-and-decorating-165002.html

Thanksgiving Decorations~made at home~?

Posted by Jade Martins on Feb-11-2010

I am the manager of a hotel…as all of you know….money is an issue. I am wanting ideas of cheap but easy and great looking ideas for decorating the lobby and front desk of my hotel. We are a small town-lots of cowboys and workers- any ideas would be greatly appreciated!

If you get out to the stores today, I have found alot of "halloween" stuff. But, what I got can also be for thanksgiving. It’s more fall looking than anything. And it’s marked down between 75 to 90 percent off. Like I got plastic flowers. Normally 5 dollars a bunch for a dollar each. They look lovely in my living room. And I got garlands of leaves. They look really nice too. Again, they were a dollar. So go look quick for the marked down stuff. Hope this helps.

I currently decorate awesome cakes in my spare time, and everyone keeps telling me that I should start a business. I think I am ready to do that, but not sure exactly what the steps are. I started making a free web page on geocities to get the word out, but no one has looked at it. I have made business cards and am passing them out everywhere, but so far I have no customers. It has only been a few days though. I plan to pay someone to make me a better website so thats a start. Does anyone have any suggestions or tips? Are there any legal things I need to do in order to be able to make and decorate cakes from my home? Please don’t laugh this is a first start for a website and business for me, but please check out what I have done so far at www.geocities.com/mysticalcakes/ and let me know what you think.

Missy
I’m not trying to do everything from the internet. I have been passing out business cards everywhere I go, there is word of mouth advertisements as well from those that I have already made cakes for.
Do I have to have a business and food license if its just a small operation from my home?
How do I set up a business profile on myspace? I have never seen that as an option, and don’t recall anyone ever looking up businesses on myspace.

myspace!! If you set up a myspace account for you business it will help attract local people! Send out comments to your friends and not only will they see them but also their friends…. Business cards are a good way to start and you can get like 250 for about 6bucks at www.vistaprint.com and also at www.giggleprint.com

Since this is your own business you will probably need to file for a ficticious business name. That way you have rights to your name!

GOOD LUCK