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Our Perception of Color

By
Services for Real Estate Pros with Riverking Custom Painting

By Benjamin Moore Paint

What is Color?

 

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Defining Color
The perception of color is a phenomenon of light - a form of energy with its own frequency and wavelength. Shine a light through a prism and you'll see it divide into six color families: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet.White light is the combination of all colors, while black is the absence of all colors.We perceive color due to the pigments in a given object. A blue pillow appears blue to our eyes because the pigment in the pillow is absorbing all the colors of the light except for the color blue reflecting back to us.

 

Color and Light
Have you ever tried to match a color swatch in a store only to find it looks like a completely different color when you bring it home? You've just experienced metamerism, the occurrence of colors seemingly changing when viewed under different light sources. Some colors are more prone to this phenomenon than others, including tans, taupes, grays, grayed-blues, mauves, lilacs, and grayed yellow-greens such as celadon. View color swatches in the actual space and lighting conditions in which they are being used.

 

Color and Space
Space affects how we perceive color, so keep proportion and scale in mind when making your color selections, along with whether you want the room to feel intimate or open. Consider elements such as ceiling height, visible wall space, furnishings, and large pieces of artwork, along with the number of windows and doorways in a room.

 

How Colors Affect Other Colors
Colors that surround a given color affect how we perceive that color. An off-white wall can appear pink when paired with a vibrant red carpet. Complementary colors, such as red and green, enhance each other's color quality. Two squares of the identical shade of gray will appear to differ from one another when one is placed against a white background and the other against black.

Lise Howe
Keller Williams Capital Properties - Washington, DC
Assoc. Broker in DC, MD, VA and attorney in DC

when I moved from one house to another, I asked my painter to paint the dining room the same color as it had been in the old house. THe color seemed so different, and I attributed it to the larger room size, the different curtains, the different location in the house w/ more light than in the previous house, and yes, probably the other colors from the other rooms nearby - until I realized that this paint was high gloss and the old  house certainly didn't have high gloss paint in the dining room. Then I realized that the painter had used the barn door red w/ lots of brown undertones to it (in high gloss) that had been on the front door! The old dining room had been a bluer red but I was so sure that it was the same color that I didn't ever think to look closely or to analyze the difference. The laugh was definately on me. I decided I liked the "new" color better but had it repainted in a flat paint.  

Aug 19, 2009 01:58 AM
Geri Sonkin
Douglas Elliman Real Estate 516-457-7103 - Merrick, NY
Long Island Real Estate & Staging Expert

Perception of color is an interesting element I'd never thought about before one of my homeowners mentioned he was color blind.  I was staging his home and he suggested an alternate color for one of the rooms after we discussed his color blindness.  I told him I thought we should appeal to the buying population who were probably not necessarily afflicted with his problem.  Interesting though.  I'm reminded over and over again that life is really all about one's perceptions.

Aug 19, 2009 02:00 AM