What colour for a feature wall
7 years ago
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Colour for kitchen wall with feature brick wall?
Comments (8)You could go lots of ways with this kitchen.... You have good light and it looks lovely and warm..... I would personally go for a neutral then you can dress up or down with accessories. Have a look at rolling fog, Mirage II, Dorchester Pink and Clay by Little Greene....See Morehelp needed on choosing wall colours
Comments (24)I wonder if you have space for something like this on the wall between kitchen and window. https://www.ikea.com/gb/en/products/storage-furniture/shelving-units-systems/veber%C3%B6d-shelving-unit-natural-art-10343328/ Scroll through the pics on that page to see them with stuff in them, so you can get an idea of how they would work for you. Maybe two of those? It will give you lots of storage and won't block the ventilation (hopefully). You can clamp a light on it, on the kitchen side, to give you light above the counter. With the central light you'll be casting a shadow on the counter/cooktop, so you'll be working in your own shadow. It's just an idea :-)...See MoreWhat colour feature wall
Comments (7)I havent bought the white tv unit and coffee table yet and the navy blue curtians arent on yet, but this is the room. Ive just laid the floor and skirking boards need to go back on so ignore the mess. So blue sofas, blue curtians and grey floor with white units, but wasnt sure if dark grey or navy blue would be best for the feature wall? I will be painting the rest of the walls white....See MoreInchyra blue feature wall, what colour for the other walls?
Comments (12)The stone looks to be quite neutral which is probably good (some stone such as the type found in the Cotswolds can be very strongly coloured). If the room doesn't get a lot of natural light then I would personally avoid neutrals that may be a bit too cool or a bit too grey as it may look drab. Shaded White is lovely and could work really well with the beams. That would be my starting point. I would test paint of large sheets of paper and pin them up in the corners. Put them next to pure white paper too to see the colour. If you whitewash the walls first, then you can gauge how much light it gets and if it looks cold....See More- 7 years ago
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- 7 years agolast modified: 7 years ago
- 7 years ago
Carolina