home color palette Archives - Blobhope Familyhttps://blobhope.biz/tag/home-color-palette/Life lessonsSat, 11 Apr 2026 06:33:06 +0000en-UShourly1https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3Our New Home Color Palettehttps://blobhope.biz/our-new-home-color-palette/https://blobhope.biz/our-new-home-color-palette/#respondSat, 11 Apr 2026 06:33:06 +0000https://blobhope.biz/?p=12804Choosing a whole-house paint palette doesn’t have to feel like speed-dating 400 shades of “almost white.” In this guide, we walk through how we built our new home color palettefrom auditing fixed finishes (floors, counters, tile) to picking a warm, flexible base neutral and layering in accents like sage green, dusty blue, charcoal, and terracotta. You’ll learn how undertones and room orientation affect color, why LRV and sheen can change what you see, and how to test paint like a pro so you don’t end up with surprise lavender at night. Plus, get a realistic peek at what the process actually looked like in our hometape, samples, squint tests, and all.

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Moving into a new home is magicalright up until you realize every wall color is either “Rental Beige #4” or “Why Is This Gray Also Purple?” So we did what any reasonable adults do: we stared at paint chips until we forgot our own names, then built a whole-house color palette that actually makes sense.

This is the story (and the strategy) behind our new home color palette: how we chose a cohesive set of colors that flows room to room, works in different light, plays nicely with our floors and finishes, and still has enough personality to feel like usnot a sad waiting room.

The Big Idea: One Palette, Many Moods

A whole-house palette isn’t about painting every room the same color. It’s about creating a “family” of colors that share a common temperature and vibeso your hallway doesn’t feel like it leads to an entirely different zip code. We wanted continuity without boredom: calm, warm-leaning neutrals as the backbone, plus a few accent colors that show up like recurring characters in a good TV series.

Our rule: pick a consistent undertone direction (warm or cool), choose a dependable base neutral, then layer supporting colors that repeat across rooms in different proportions. In other words, less “paint roulette,” more “planned joy.”

Step 1: Audit the Stuff You’re Not Painting

Before we picked a single swatch, we did a quick home “inventory” of the permanent or pricey elements: flooring, countertops, tile, cabinetry, stone, and big furniture we weren’t replacing. These are your palette’s boss levelignore them and the colors you love will suddenly look… unemployed.

Our quick checklist

  • Flooring undertone: warm honey oak, neutral oak, gray-washed, or deep espresso?
  • Hard finishes: creamy tile vs. bright white tile; warm marble vs. cool quartz.
  • Metals: brushed nickel (cool), brass (warm), matte black (neutral-bold).
  • Textiles: rugs and upholstery we already owned and actually like.

We discovered our home’s “fixed” elements leaned warm-neutral overall, so we steered away from icy grays and ultra-blue whites that can clash and make everything feel slightly… medical.

Step 2: Choose a Base Neutral (And Commit Like It’s a Tattoo)

The base neutral is the color that quietly holds the entire house together. It shows up on most walls, transitional spaces, or trimbasically, it’s the color doing the most emotional labor.

We picked our neutral using three “non-negotiables”

  1. It had to be warm-leaning or truly balanced. Many “neutral” colors have sneaky undertones (pink, green, violet). We wanted something that stayed friendly in daylight and didn’t turn weird under warm bulbs at night.
  2. It needed the right brightness. A color’s Light Reflectance Value (LRV) helps estimate how light or dark it will read. In plain English: higher LRV = more light bounced around; lower LRV = moodier. We aimed for a light-but-not-blinding range for main areas.
  3. It had to flatter our floors. A perfect paint color in a vacuum can look wrong next to wood tones or stone. We kept our swatches near the floor and compared them at different times of day.

If you’re stuck between two neutrals, try the “squint test”: squint at both swatches against your floor or countertop. The one that blends more gracefully is usually the better long-term teammate.

Step 3: Build Room Palettes With the 60-30-10 Rule (Without Getting Bossy About It)

Once our base neutral was chosen, we used a simple design guideline to keep things balanced: the 60-30-10 rule. Think of it as training wheels for color confidence.

  • 60% = dominant color (often wall color or large visual surface)
  • 30% = secondary color (major furniture, cabinetry, rugs)
  • 10% = accent color (pillows, art, small decor, a bold door… your fun stuff)

This let us repeat our palette across the home without making every room identical. Sometimes our dominant was a warm off-white; other times we flipped it and let a deeper color lead (hello, cozy office).

Our New Home Color Palette, Color by Color

Here’s the palette we landed onorganized by role, not by “what looked cute on a 1-inch chip under fluorescent store lighting.”

1) The Foundation: Warm White / Soft Off-White

This is our “clean canvas” colorbright enough to feel fresh, warm enough to feel welcoming. Great for main living spaces, halls, and anywhere you want light without harshness.

  • Where we used it: open living areas, hallways, and ceilings where we wanted airy continuity
  • Real paint examples: Sherwin-Williams Alabaster; Benjamin Moore White Dove

2) The Bridge Neutral: Greige / Warm Taupe

Greige is the social mediator of paint colors: it blends warm and cool elements and helps rooms feel grounded. We chose a greige that didn’t go green in afternoon light or pink at night (yes, that can happen, and yes, it feels personal).

  • Where we used it: guest room, connecting spaces, and areas with lots of mixed lighting
  • Real paint examples: Benjamin Moore Edgecomb Gray; similar warm greige options from major brands

3) The Natural Accent: Muted Sage Green

Sage is calm, timeless, and plays well with wood tones, leather, linen, and black metal. It adds color without shouting. In our home, it became the “nature note” that repeats gently through decor and a couple feature areas.

  • Where we used it: kitchen-adjacent area, accent wall, and repeated in textiles/art
  • Real paint examples: Sherwin-Williams Clary Sage; similar muted greens recommended by paint experts

4) The Cool Counterpoint: Dusty Blue / Slate Blue

We wanted one cooler shade for contrast, but not an icy one. Dusty blue gives that calm “exhale” feeling and looks especially good with crisp white trim and warm woodslike denim for your walls.

  • Where we used it: bedroom accents, built-ins, and decor moments (not every walljust enough)
  • Real paint examples: Sherwin-Williams Smoky Blue or comparable dusty/slate blues

5) The Bold Neutral: Charcoal / Soft Black

A soft black or charcoal makes everything around it look more intentional. We used it like eyeliner: strategically and with confidence. It anchors the palette and adds modern depth without going full cave.

  • Where we used it: doors, select trim, a couple furniture pieces, and metal accents
  • Real paint examples: Sherwin-Williams Iron Ore; other soft black/charcoal classics

6) The Warm Pop: Terracotta / Clay

This was our “joy color.” Terracotta adds warmth and personality, and it pairs beautifully with sage, warm whites, and natural textures. We used it in small dosesbecause too much clay can start feeling like you accidentally moved into a cinnamon stick.

  • Where we used it: art, textiles, and one small accent area
  • Real paint examples: Sherwin-Williams Cavern Clay; similar clay/terracotta tones

Step 4: Let the Light Boss You Around (Just a Little)

Light changes everything. Morning sun, afternoon glare, cloudy days, warm bulbs at nightpaint will shapeshift through all of it. We stopped asking, “Do I like this color?” and started asking, “Do I like this color at 8 a.m., 2 p.m., and 9 p.m.?”

Room direction basics

  • North-facing rooms: cooler, more consistent light; warm undertones help keep rooms from feeling chilly.
  • South-facing rooms: brighter, warmer light; many colors look more intensesoften with balanced or slightly cooler neutrals.
  • East-facing rooms: bright mornings, calmer afternoons; great for gentle, fresh colors.
  • West-facing rooms: warmer afternoon/evening glow; can intensify warm colors and make some neutrals look golden.

In our north-facing spaces, we leaned into warmer whites and avoided colors that looked “perfectly crisp” in the store but turned icy at home. In brighter rooms, we used slightly deeper or more muted tones to keep things from looking washed out.

Step 5: Sheen Matters (Yes, Even If You Wish It Didn’t)

Paint sheen affects how much light bounces off a surface. Higher gloss reflects more light and can make color look richerand also highlight wall imperfections like it’s auditioning for a detective show.

Our practical sheen map

  • Ceilings: flat/matte (calm, forgiving)
  • Main walls: eggshell or matte (soft, livable, easier to clean than flat)
  • Trim and doors: satin or semi-gloss (durable, crisp definition)
  • Bathrooms/kitchens: often satin/eggshell for wipeability (and consider ventilation)

We also learned that “the same color” in different sheens can look like two different colors. So we chose our wall color first, then tested trim in a higher sheen next to it to make sure the undertones still got along.

Step 6: Test Like You Mean It

We don’t trust tiny swatches anymore. They’re adorable liars.

What actually worked for us

  1. Go big: test large sample areas or use big paint sample sheets you can move around.
  2. Test in multiple spots: one wall can be sunny while another is in permanent shadow.
  3. Check it in real life: morning, afternoon, evening, plus lights on and lights off.
  4. Compare against “true white”: it helps reveal undertones you can’t unsee later.

We also pulled fabrics, wood samples, and a couple favorite decor items into the room during testing. If the paint made our rug look sad, it was a no.

Step 7: Make It Flow Room to Room

Cohesion happens when you repeat a few elements intentionally. We repeated our warm white on trim, used the greige as a “connector” in transition zones, and let the accents (sage, dusty blue, terracotta, charcoal) show up in smaller, consistent ways.

How we handled open spaces

In open floor plans, color can help “zone” areas without adding walls. We kept the main wall color consistent and used accent colors through cabinetry, built-ins, rugs, and decor to define areas (kitchen vs. living, for example). It feels intentional, not choppy.

Common Mistakes We Skipped (So You Can, Too)

  • Ignoring undertones: neutrals are not neutral if they clash with your floors.
  • Choosing under store lighting: your home lighting will humble that decision fast.
  • Too many “favorite” colors: a whole-house palette isn’t a rainbow audition.
  • Forgetting bulb temperature: warm bulbs can yellow a white; cool LEDs can flatten warmth.
  • All eggshell, everywhere, forever: match sheen to function (and wall texture reality).

Our 500-Word Real-Life Color Adventure (A.K.A. What It Actually Looked Like)

The honest version of choosing “Our New Home Color Palette” starts with a perfectly normal sentence: “Let’s just pick a simple white.” That sentence was immediately followed by three weeks of chaos, twelve sample pots, and at least one moment where we stood in the hallway whispering, “Is this… pink?”

At first we tried to be spontaneouslike the kind of people who can buy jeans without trying them on. We grabbed a few popular warm whites and a couple greiges, held them up to the wall, nodded seriously, and told ourselves we were basically interior designers now. Then we taped the swatches up and watched them transform throughout the day like tiny color gremlins. The “clean” white turned icy in the morning. The “neutral” greige looked faintly green near the kitchen. And one shadeone single innocent-looking shadewent full lavender at 9 p.m. under warm bulbs. We didn’t choose it, but we still talk about it like it was a ghost sighting.

The turning point was when we stopped testing paint in isolation. We dragged our rug corner into the room, propped a throw pillow next to the swatch wall, and leaned a wood cutting board against the baseboard like it belonged there. That’s when everything clicked: colors don’t live alone. They share space with floors, furniture, art, and whatever random object you leave on the counter for two weeks. (In our case: scissors and a mysterious single sock.)

We also learned to test bigger. Tiny swatches made every option look “fine,” which is not the same as “right.” So we painted larger sample squares and taped up bigger sample sheets, moving them from sunny walls to shadowy corners. We did the full routine: coffee-light test, midday test, evening-lamp test, and the highly scientific “stand across the room and squint” test. The best colors didn’t scream for attention; they quietly made the room feel calmer and the existing finishes look better.

The funniest part? Once we landed on the palettewarm white base, friendly greige bridge, sage and dusty blue accents, charcoal grounding moments, and a pinch of terracottawe realized it matched the stuff we already loved. Our favorite mug. The art we kept. The cozy sweater we always reach for. The palette felt like us, not like we copied a showroom. Now when we walk from room to room, the house feels connected. Not identicaljust in conversation. And we finally stopped introducing ourselves to paint chips by name.

Conclusion

Our new home color palette works because it’s built on real-life constraints (light, floors, finishes), then sprinkled with real personality (sage, dusty blue, terracotta, and a confident charcoal). If you take one thing from our process, let it be this: choose a base neutral you trust, test colors in your actual lighting, and repeat your accents like a good design chorus. Your home will feel cohesive, comfortable, and unmistakably yours.

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Decorating with Colorhttps://blobhope.biz/decorating-with-color-2/https://blobhope.biz/decorating-with-color-2/#respondSun, 05 Apr 2026 01:33:05 +0000https://blobhope.biz/?p=11944Color can transform a home faster than almost any other design choicebut only if you use it strategically. This in-depth guide to decorating with color shows you how to build balanced palettes, apply the 60-30-10 rule, understand undertones, use LRV and sheen wisely, and adapt colors to natural and artificial light. You’ll get room-by-room tips for living rooms, kitchens, bedrooms, bathrooms, and small spaces, plus modern ideas like color drenching and warm neutral layering. The article also includes practical mistakes to avoid, a weekend action plan, and an extended real-world experience section to help you make confident choices that look beautiful and feel right in everyday life.

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Color is the fastest way to change how a home feelsfaster than new furniture, cheaper than a renovation, and far less likely to require power tools and emotional support snacks. Whether you want a living room that feels lively, a bedroom that feels like a deep exhale, or a kitchen that doesn’t look like it gave up in 2009, color can do the heavy lifting.

The trick is not choosing a “pretty color.” The trick is choosing the right color for your light, layout, lifestyle, and existing stuff. A shade that looks dreamy on your phone can become a totally different character on your wall by 4:30 PM. That’s why decorating with color works best when you combine creativity with a little strategy: color balance, undertones, light reflectance, finish, and room-to-room flow.

In this guide, you’ll get practical, design-proven ways to build a palette, avoid expensive paint regrets, and create a home that feels cohesive without looking boring. We’ll cover color theory in plain English, when to go bold, when to stay neutral, and how to make even small spaces feel intentional and stylish.

Why Color Matters More Than Most People Think

Color is functional design. It can visually widen a narrow hall, lower the stress level in a busy family room, and give a plain boxy room architectural presence. Warm colors (reds, oranges, yellows, and warm neutrals) usually feel energetic and cozy. Cool colors (blues, greens, and cool grays) often read calmer and more spacious.

But mood isn’t just about hue. Saturation and contrast matter too. A deep olive and a bright lime are both “green,” yet they behave completely differently in a room. This is why good decorating with color starts by asking: What do I want this room to feel like at 7 AM and 9 PM?

The No-Panic Formula for Building a Color Palette

Use the 60-30-10 Rule as Your Starting Structure

If your room color choices feel chaotic, this ratio brings instant order:

  • 60% dominant color (walls, large rug, major furniture)
  • 30% secondary color (upholstery, curtains, bedding, side chairs)
  • 10% accent color (art, pillows, lamps, decor accessories)

This doesn’t mean your home has to look “formulaic.” It means your eye has a visual hierarchy. You can absolutely break the rule later. But starting with structure is how you avoid the classic “I bought six cute things and now my room looks like a confused gift shop” problem.

Build Harmonies with the Color Wheel

If you’ve ever wondered why some color combos feel instantly “right,” the color wheel explains it:

  • Monochromatic: one hue in different shades/tints (calm, elegant, layered)
  • Analogous: neighboring hues (e.g., blue-green-teal) for smooth, serene flow
  • Complementary: opposite hues (e.g., blue-orange) for contrast and energy
  • Triadic: three evenly spaced hues for playful but balanced color stories

If you love bold spaces but fear chaos, use one dominant color and keep the other colors in smaller doses. Contrast is exciting; too much equal-opportunity contrast is visual noise.

Light Changes Everything (Yes, Everything)

Natural Light Direction Matters

A color can look cool, warm, gray, or greenish depending on room orientation. North-facing rooms generally run cooler and dimmer, so warm-leaning colors often balance them. South-facing rooms get stronger, warmer light; many colors appear brighter and warmer there. East-facing rooms are soft and cooler later in the day; west-facing rooms intensify in late afternoon light.

Translation: never pick paint from a store chip alone. Always test in your actual room.

Artificial Light Is a Co-Designer

Warm bulbs can make creams and beiges glow (or go yellow if overdone). Cooler bulbs can make crisp whites feel cleaneror flat. Mixing lamp types in one room can also shift color perception wall to wall. Before finalizing any paint, test it with the lighting you actually use at night, not just daylight.

Undertones, LRV, and Sheen: The Three Technical Details That Save You Money

Undertones: The Sneaky Color Beneath the Color

Undertones are why two “greige” paints can look completely different. One may lean pink, another green, another violet. Warm whites can carry yellow/red undertones; cool whites often lean blue/green/violet.

Practical trick: compare samples against fixed elements you can’t change (flooring, countertop, tile, wood trim). If your floor is warm oak, a cool gray with blue undertones might clash. Color harmony starts with what already exists.

LRV (Light Reflectance Value): A Number Worth Knowing

LRV is typically measured on a 0–100 scale, where lower numbers absorb more light and higher numbers reflect more light. High-LRV colors can help rooms feel brighter; low-LRV shades absorb light and feel moodier. This is one reason small dark rooms can feel cozy and sophisticated with deep paint, while low-light workspaces may benefit from lighter values.

You don’t need to memorize chartsjust use LRV as a quick reality check before committing.

Sheen: Same Color, Different Personality

Finish affects appearance as much as pigment:

  • Matte: soft look, hides imperfections, cozy vibe
  • Eggshell: subtle glow, common for living areas
  • Satin: more durable and cleanable, good for higher-use zones
  • Semi-gloss/Gloss: reflective, durable, best for trim/doors and statement moments

Pro move: use one color in multiple finishes on walls, trim, and built-ins for a tonal, designer look without adding new hues.

Room-by-Room Color Strategies That Actually Work

Living Room: Conversation-Friendly Color

Start with your biggest textile (rug or sofa) and build around it. If the sofa is neutral, add personality through art, pillows, and one bold anchor (like a painted media wall). If the sofa is already colorful, keep walls quieter and repeat that sofa color in at least two smaller places for cohesion.

Great starter combinations:

  • Warm white + olive + camel + black accents
  • Soft greige + dusty blue + walnut wood + brass
  • Moody navy + cream textiles + rust accents

Kitchen: Balance Energy and Cleanliness

Kitchens benefit from colors that feel fresh by day and inviting at night. If cabinetry is fixed, use wall color to rebalance temperature. Cool marble counters often pair better with warm whites than icy whites. Open shelving looks more intentional when decor colors echo wall undertones.

Also, finish matters here: satin or eggshell walls are often easier to maintain in active cooking zones.

Bedroom: Calm Doesn’t Have to Mean Boring

You can create restful rooms with muted color rather than default beige. Try layered blues, sage families, dusty mauves, earthy clay tones, or smoky green-grays. Keep contrast lower than in social spaces, and bring depth through texture: linen, knit throws, natural wood, and matte finishes.

If you want drama, deeper shades can feel cocooning when paired with soft lighting and lighter bedding.

Bathroom: Small Space, Big Opportunity

Bathrooms are excellent places to test stronger color. You use them often, but for shorter periods, so bold choices can feel exciting rather than overwhelming. Mirror reflections amplify color, so sample paint before committing. If tile is cool-toned, choose compatible undertones; don’t fight your finishes.

Small Rooms and Hallways: Stop Playing It Too Safe

Yes, light colors can make spaces feel airy. But deep colors can also visually blur edges and create a polished, enveloping look. If you go dark, keep trim intentional (either matching for immersion or crisp contrast for architecture). Add warm lighting and a few reflective surfaces to keep depth, not gloom.

Modern Color Moves You Can Use Right Now

Color Drenching (and Why People Love It)

Color drenching means using one hue across multiple surfaceswalls, trim, ceiling, and sometimes built-ins. It makes a room feel immersive and cohesive, and in many cases can make small spaces feel larger by reducing visual breaks.

Start with a den, powder room, office, or guest room if you want low-risk experimentation. Use layered materials (wood, metal, woven textures) so the room feels rich, not flat.

Warm Neutrals Are Having a Strong Moment

Design direction has shifted from stark, chilly whites toward warmer neutrals and earthy tones. Think mushroom, oat, camel, clay, cocoa, and softened olive. These shades pair beautifully with wood and natural fibers, and they age gracefully as trend cycles evolve.

Accent Color Without “Accent Wall Syndrome”

Instead of one random painted wall, distribute accent color in repeated touches: art, textiles, small furniture, lampshades, and ceramics. Repetition makes the palette feel designed rather than accidental.

Common Color Mistakes (and Better Moves)

  • Mistake: Choosing paint first.
    Better move: Start with fixed materials and largest furnishings.
  • Mistake: Sampling once at noon.
    Better move: Check morning, afternoon, evening, and lamplight.
  • Mistake: Ignoring undertones.
    Better move: Compare against floors, counters, and trim.
  • Mistake: Too many bold colors at equal volume.
    Better move: Use hierarchy (60-30-10 or a similar ratio).
  • Mistake: Flat room from single finish everywhere.
    Better move: Mix finishes for depth.
  • Mistake: Following trends with no personal filter.
    Better move: Choose colors you enjoy living with daily.

A Practical 1-Weekend Plan to Decorate with Color

  1. Pick a mood goal for each room in one sentence.
  2. Photograph fixed elements in natural and evening light.
  3. Choose a palette structure (60-30-10 or monochromatic + accents).
  4. Narrow to 3–5 candidate paints per room.
  5. Test large samples on 2+ walls in each room.
  6. Observe for 48 hours at different times.
  7. Finalize paint + sheen + accent strategy.
  8. Style with textiles, art, and lighting that repeat your palette.

Conclusion

Decorating with color is equal parts art and decision-making. You don’t need perfect design instinctsyou need a method. Start with mood, build a balanced palette, respect light direction, check undertones, and test before committing. Use trends as inspiration, not rules. Most importantly, design for how you actually live: your routines, your light, your furniture, your comfort level.

A beautifully colored home is not one that follows every “hot shade” on social media. It’s one that feels coherent, personal, and easy to live in from Monday morning to Saturday night. Color should support your life, not just your camera roll.

Extended Section: Real-World Experiences Decorating with Color (Approx. )

Across real homes, one pattern shows up again and again: people who feel “bad at color” are usually not bad at colorthey just skipped testing in real light. In one open-plan condo, the owners loved a cool gray online. On their walls, it turned bluish by late afternoon and made their warm wood floors look orange in an unflattering way. They switched to a warm greige with a slightly higher LRV, and suddenly the flooring looked intentional, not accidental. Same furniture, same layout, completely different mood.

Another common experience happens in north-facing rooms. Homeowners often choose crisp whites expecting brightness, then wonder why the room feels sterile or gloomy. When they move to a warmer white (or even a pale mushroom), the space feels softer and brighter at the same time. It’s not magic; it’s undertone and contrast working together.

Families with kids and pets frequently report “color fatigue” from very bright wall colors in high-traffic areas. Interestingly, many of them don’t go back to plain beigethey settle into earthy mid-tones and place brighter colors in replaceable elements like art, cushions, and washable textiles. That gives personality without constant visual stress. In short: permanent surfaces calmer, movable pieces bolder.

Small spaces are where confidence grows the fastest. A powder room painted in a deep, enveloping tone often becomes the homeowner’s favorite project because the commitment is manageable and the payoff is dramatic. People are surprised that darker colors can make tiny rooms feel styled and intentional rather than crampedespecially when mirrors, warm lighting, and metallic accents are layered in.

Bedrooms reveal another useful lesson: “calm” does not mean “white.” Many people sleep better in muted, lower-contrast palettes than in stark white rooms with sharp black accents. Soft blue-grays, olive drabs, clay beiges, and dusty mauves repeatedly show up in successful bedroom makeovers because they feel restful without being dull. Add dimmable warm lighting and textured bedding, and even simple paint looks custom.

One of the most practical experiences comes from budget-conscious redecorating. Instead of repainting every room at once, homeowners who build a whole-home palette in stages tend to get better results. They keep one connective threadoften a recurring neutral or a repeated accentand evolve room by room. This avoids costly do-overs and keeps the house coherent even while projects are in progress.

People experimenting with color drenching often expect it to feel risky, but many report the opposite: once walls, trim, and ceiling share a tone, the room feels calmer because visual edges disappear. The trick is to vary materials and finishes so the space still has depth. Matte walls, satin trim, wood furniture, woven textiles, and a few reflective accents can make one-color rooms feel layered, not flat.

The biggest takeaway from real projects is simple: confidence comes from process. Define mood first, test in real light, respect undertones, and let color repeat in small ways across the room. When people follow those steps, they stop chasing “perfect paint” and start creating spaces that feel authentically theirs.

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