Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Believe it or not, we often get similar questions in our web design work - principally because people have logos they've had for years that have fixed colours.


What we need to do is identify colours the complement this - and then the designer is the one choosing how to balance these complementary colours with black, whites and greys to make sure the overall balance works.


Complementary colours can be found 'technically' - this is because there are mathematical relationships between the frequencies of the colours that make up the complementary colours.


So sites like this one: Color Scheme Designer or this one: Color Scheme Generator help you find those colours.


Choose your existing colour first in the header section and then choose the 'type' of complement you'd like. Types are things like triad, tetrad, analogic, accented analogic and so on. Don't worry about that, just have a play!

Agree with Moos - I know what some on here will say about Farrow and Ball but they do a 'Bone Grey' that is surprisingly light and elegant depending on your shade of red. Not suggesting you buy from them - just get their colour chart and have the colour made up cheaper elsewhere.
It depends on the shade of your red carpet but I think a green would be warm e.g. ball green, stone white or vert de terre (farrow & ball) or something similar...then use white, gold or black glossy accessories to add contrast...I am guessing you don't want your hall to be too dark.

maxxi Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Agree with Moos - I know what some on here will

> say about Farrow and Ball but they do a 'Bone

> Grey' that is surprisingly light and elegant

> depending on your shade of red. Not suggesting you

> buy from them - just get their colour chart and

> have the colour made up cheaper elsewhere.


Dulwich DIY do F&B equivalent paint colours.

I didn't know that Dulwich DIY did paint... Great news and more reason to shop locally rather than big store.


A light grey sounds cool with perhaps the darkest wall in off white to keep rhe old eye distracted with some depth, contrast and, very importantly: light.

  • 2 weeks later...
for all those who found my question worth answering...big thanks and the final choice was 'borrowed light' a farrow and ball colour but mixed by our local dulwich diy guys. its sort of grey but with some blue undertones[?] so looks differently delightful as time and light changes and doesn't make the red dull. thanks

Hello,


I have a stripy carpet on my stairs and landing with the stripes varying between about 4mm and 8mm in shades of beige, brown and sort of sludgy green (sounds attractive, I know). There was also a similar in reds/pinks in the shop. It doesn't show dirt much at all although it does look brighter after a good vacuum. My hall walls are also a neutral colour.


Thanks.

Adalberto Cheung

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Ocado stopped sourcing from Waitrose a few years ago. They now source from M&S and general brands. Waitrose have their own delivery service now. I don't know how well served SE22 is by it. Ocado offers for new customers are, or certainly were, really good, particularly in the run up to Christmas. I think I got 20%/15%/10% up to a maximum of £100 spend off my first three deliveries with no delivery charge or commitment to sign up for further deliveries. There wasn't a time limit, IIRC, so it was a great way of restocking heavy store cupboard basics and stuff for the freezer.
    • Fair enough point, but does that not in a way make it even worse if they open a shop almost directly  opposite another "family" business selling exactly the same type of products?
    • As Occado source from Waitrose, and were their only deliverer at one stage, and as Waitrose do now deliver it may be they feel their reach in ED is sufficient to mean having a local outlet would not gain them sufficient additional sales to be cost effective. The movement to delivery rather than physical shopping during Covid has I believe substantially changed the grocery economics. So it may be that the High Street dynamic for physical shops has now changed. 
    • ..... thinking about the discussion about Chango.  Their "About us" blurb on the website says started by one Argentina guy.  So if one person has a successful business and goes on to open a number of shops when do they go from a supported successful "family" business to a less liked "chain"?  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...