Question
We have ceramic tile floors that look like stone in a pinkish-grayish-beigish color and the counters match. One wall is a brick fireplace (standard light red color), ceiling is pine with dark wood beams. Cabinets are currently light oak that matches the trim ...and (finally) we have wrought iron accents that we want to keep (hardware and decor). HELP...I want to tone down the pink of the counters and floor
We have ceramic tile floors that look like stone in a pinkish-grayish-beigish color and the counters match. One wall is a brick fireplace (standard light red color), ceiling is pine with dark wood beams. Cabinets are currently light oak that matches the trim ...and (finally) we have wrought iron accents that we want to keep (hardware and decor). HELP...I want to tone down the pink of the counters and floor
Answer
play around with the Sherwin Williams color visualizer to find something that you like. It is the best paint visualizer on the web, imho. I like how their color palette is laid out, I like that you can search by color family & color name, the "painted" rooms look the most realistic, and it suggests coordinating color schemes. You can literally spend hours: http://www.sherwin-williams.com/do_it_yourself/paint_colors/visualizer/ I think a shade of light brown like "oak creek" (# 7718) would help to make the pink tones look more sophisticated & elegant.
play around with the Sherwin Williams color visualizer to find something that you like. It is the best paint visualizer on the web, imho. I like how their color palette is laid out, I like that you can search by color family & color name, the "painted" rooms look the most realistic, and it suggests coordinating color schemes. You can literally spend hours: http://www.sherwin-williams.com/do_it_yourself/paint_colors/visualizer/ I think a shade of light brown like "oak creek" (# 7718) would help to make the pink tones look more sophisticated & elegant.
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