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Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by suzyqtexas (My Page) on Tue, Dec 11, 12 at 11:55
| I would post in the Home Building forum, lots of good advice over there! |
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| Okay, I will post over there too! Thank you! |
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| I would consider pale browns and creams. They will look pretty and kind of go with your neighbors as well. I am in CA as well and really don't like the peachy builder home colors. One suggestion my old painter gave me that helped was to print a bunch of black and white copies of the house and color it with color pencils. Make several combinations. Then you can see what trim looks good in what color etc. Lalitha |
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- Posted by hollysprings (My Page) on Tue, Dec 11, 12 at 13:43
| The problem isn't the house color. It's fine. It's the BIG WHITE GARAGE DOORS that shout at you. They should be painted house body color, and if you're keeping the white trim on the windows, then the trim that's currently painted body color should be painted white as well. And either remove the fake rock on the front of the garage or wrap it around completely. It's another thing that SHOUTS. |
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| Agreed. |
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| I love that look! That is what I am going for but it will be a big difference from the other house on my block. I am trying to go with my taste but also keep the other house somewhat in mind. The frustrating part is paying for the many samples, it gets really pricey! I just picked up 3 more today but the sun was going down while I was painting. I could tell just from painting them they weren't right. I was strongly leaning towards Waynesboro Taupe which is Benjamin Moore but it would have to be color matched. I have not had very good luck with color matching. I don't think it would be such a struggle for me if those wood detailed pieces weren't there. I just don't know if I want those to be highlighted or blended. I may end up with more samples... |
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| mommy - I remember the samples - this is different than anything else on the block. I modeled it off a high end house a couple miles away that I admired and finally had enough guts (to my DH chagrin) to knock on the door. Turns out they used a paint company that no longer makes that color, so it was all paint match. I wanted a bit more green than the model but the same richness. The owners were great. I bought Barnes and Noble gift cards for the kids and cookies for the owners and kids. Color matching was a disaster - I finally started mixing my own and they still couldn't color match (BM and SW). Then I said - what about simple math - this sample has these items, this one has these and your color match doesn't have all of the elements - so, I calculated out a formula and said - mix it! They said it never works but it was exactly what I was trying to achieve. BTW - I started out wanting to stick with basic stone and then kept getting braver and bolder. The neighbors love it as they know it was a labor of love and I let them vote on the garage door colors (although none were used that are on the door but a mixture of a 2 of them) I can send you the SW color formula (I wanted BM initially but they were so far off on the color that I finally gave up) The SW has a lifetime warranty on the paint - not that I believe it. |
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| Badgergal - That is too funny. We really must be cyber twins. Check out my garage door - retreat is on their but I have to find the key to remember which swatch. 18 years ago, when we first painted our house the required stone color, I was telling someone about painting our house and she asked what color we painted it- I was so proud of our neighborhood match- heather stone and she replied - another boring stone. |
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| A2 gemini, three years ago, after I had painted the house, we decided to put Hardi-Plank on our house. I still loved the color of my house so we had the planks custom factory painted in the Retreat color. I still wonder why we didn't think of the Hardi-Plank before I had spent weeks painting my house all by myself. So cyber-twin, Hardi-Plank, another thing we have in common. |
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| Even if you're not going to use SW paint (I think you might want to - your painter can use whatever paint you tell him to by the way) you can still use their visualizer tool (link below). Upload your photo and play with their exterior paint colors. |
Here is a link that might be useful: SW Tools
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- Posted by hollysprings (My Page) on Wed, Dec 12, 12 at 11:24
| The problem with going with a more dramatic and contrasting color is that faux stone. It will really make it stand out in a bad way because it doesn't wrap all the way around the garage. Does it wrap all the way around the posts? If not, then definately think about removing it entirely. It would be a better look. |
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| A2gemini, how would you describe your color, is it a gray? I have put several gray colors up and many of the ones I sampled have a green hue to them. Lovely colors but I wasn't expecting the green. I worry about how the whole house would look. The others end up looking like concrete and that won't work. I really am leaning towards a gray but I have to decide whether it will be a gray-green or gray-brown. Badgergirl, Retreat is in my garage, along with Oyster Bay. I sampled both of those for my dining room and was seriously considering Retreat. I ended up choosing BM Weimeraner mainly because I was afraid to go with such a dark color. I used Comfort Gray for my living room/kitchen (also on the same color chip). It looks beautiful on your house. I think I may just pull out the sample and see how it looks on mine. I recently knocked on a neighbors door to ask about their concrete stamped driveway. My family thought I was crazy! I will let you know what I think of Retreat later today. Edited to correct my grammar mistake: their replaced there! I saw running post about errors and I figured I better fix it!!haha! |
This post was edited by mommy2nk on Wed, Dec 12, 12 at 11:35
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| I imagine someone else hit this point, but since you don't like the colors on the other houses, I suggest choose a color you really do like BUT keep it in the same light-dark range (value) as the houses close around. That way the color contrast will be gentle and the value harmony strong. |
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| Mommy It definitely has some green tones in with the gray - but the light makes it look either more green or more gray. The closest color match is Thunderous6021. Thunderous has a lot of green tone but we softened and lightened it with a medium gray.(It was called Mansard stone but it was a custom color. If you are interested, I can send you the codes to make the formula. |
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| FYI, a gable is just the wall under the pointy part of the roof. The decorative boards on your garage gable are, I think, battens, which are just pieces of wood that cover up the seams between the wood siding. They are primarily decorative, and if you don't like them, you could probably take them off. (On older Tudor homes, you might see a similar effect created with actual beams, and those would be structural and not just cosmetic). Because your house has the whole California/Mediterranean thing going on, I don't think that highlighting the battens is going to be in keeping with the style of the home, so I would favor painting them to blend in. You could remove them, but you might find that makes the garage gable too plain and boring. As others have suggested, you will have to choose a paint that works with the stone, unless you want to remove the stone. The stone definitely has some of that peachy thing going on, although it has some more muted grays that you could work with. Based on your pics and my images for Waynesboro Taupe (that is, take this with a grain of salt since computers don't always render color right), I don't really like the Waynesboro Taupe with the stone. Here are some colors I liked better: Chelsea Gray I think that you could keep black as an accent color (I like black and taupe together) for the shutters and maybe the front door. I would like to see the garage door go dark, either matching the wall color or even going a few shades darker. The white draws too much attention to what really isn't a great feature of the house (I'm not a fan of prominent garage doors in general, let's not make them stand out more than they have to.) Benjamin Moore's color viewer has a sample picture called "Ageless Tudor" that has some characteristics in common with your home (stone, board and batten gable) that you might want to use for experimenting. Or I think you can upload your own photo, although I can't vouch for how well that works. |
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| Send us your final picture - and remember SW can paint on-line for you! |
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