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Nail the Right Color for Your Listing

By
Real Estate Agent with Century 21 Northland

You've seen clients react: The wall color can make or break a room. And when selling a home, choosing wrongly could make for a very costly mistake.

Trendy color: The 'It' Paint Color for 2017

The color “sets up the temperature, the depth, the mood, and the atmosphere for all the other colors to be layered and featured,” says Gretchen Schauffer, founder of the paint line Devine Color.

Schauffler and Puji Sherer, president at Colorhouse Paint, recently offered some tips at Curbed.com for selecting the best paint color for a space. Among their tips:

Weigh the light and scale of the space. A room facing north could have a much different quality of light, affecting how the paint appears compared with a south-facing room. A dusky lavender’s blue undertones, for example, can be strong in a south-facing room, but the warm lavender can appear lilac in a north-facing space. Carefully review the paint colors in the actual space. Paint a big poster board or even a section of the wall before committing to the entire wall. This will help you spot any undertones in the color beforehand.

Don’t go too bright. Let the wall color be the background, the color experts recommend. In living spaces, Sherer and Schauffler recommends letting the wall color be the supporting player and not the star. “I’m always explaining how that background color is going to actually allow you to see the foreground,” Schauffler says. A neutral wall may feel “muted and subdued,” but “the colors sit back so they become more backdrops and don’t overwhelm the space,” Sherer says.

Check the color temperature. You want buyers to feel comfortable in the space as soon as they walk in. Cooler hues — blues and greens — are known for creating more restful retreats that are calm and peaceful. “Any colors that are a little bit on the cooler side are great for bedroom spaces,” Sherer says. On the other hand, warm and energetic colors — yellows, oranges, and reds — tend to work better for social areas in the home. They are "gathering colors, so they’re good to put in spaces like dining rooms or kitchens, where people sit around the table and share stories, or cook and eat together," Sherer says.

View more of their color tips at Curbed.com.

Source: “How to Choose the Best Paint Color for Any Room in Your House,” Curbed.com (Nov. 1, 2016)

Posted by

Jon Becker - Century 21 Northland

ABR, Green, SFR, Quality Service Award (2009-2013)

jon@c21jb.com

231-342-5401

www.c21jb.com for all Traverse City area real estate listings & information