The Mercury News

Right pop of color can make a big impact in a room

- Earni Jameson

When you’ve been writing about home design for as long as I have, certain expression­s begin to wear — like “bring the outdoors in.” Please, living in the tropics with three dogs, I spend a good amount of time taking the outdoors back out, sticks, mud, mosquitoes, frogs. Another worn expression is “then just add a pop of color.”

Next time I hear a designer say, “just add a pop of color,” I’m afraid I’ll say right back, “I’ll give you a pop of color. Where would you like it?”

I’m sorry, but the words “just” and “color” don’t belong in the same sentence. First of all, picking a background wall color is already triple-black-diamond difficult, but selecting a lookat-me accent color, that perfect-pitch purple pillow, is way harder. And would someone please define “pop”? I picture the living room after a game of paintball.

So when a design friend recently introduced me to Minneapoli­s designer Lucy Penfield and said her specialty was “living in color,” I thought maybe she could help me with my pop predicamen­t. So I called her up. In under three minutes, words like azalea, parrot green, peacock, mango and jalapeño were punctuatin­g our conversati­on. The woman can talk color, all right.

“Color is experienti­al,” Penfield said. “It’s about energy and the feelings it brings to your soul. It can lift the spirt, calm the mind, sweep you away or ground you. It can evoke a mood or change one.”

“I want some of that,” I said.

We talked about her new collection of exuberant throw pillows for Missio Home, which is designed to add, you guessed it, pops of color to a room. Then I peppered her with my pressing color questions:

Q

I get so tired of hearing designers tell me to add a pop of color. It sounds so easy, but it’s definitely an art. Can you offer some guidelines?

A

Be brave. Realize that rooms come alive when they have a color surprise. The pop can be small, like a red bowl, or large, like a turquoise accent wall. The idea is to add something unexpected that introduces a little whimsy. Start with a baby step. If that resonates, go bigger and bolder.

Q

What makes you wince when you walk into a home?

A

An expression­less home that is void of color. The rooms feel so lifeless and sad. Many people have homes like this because they feel safe. My heart drops, and I just want to say, “Honey, you can do it. Try it. It’s just a throw pillow or a vase on the table.”

I also feel sad when I see homes where the owners felt compelled to do their whole house in gray, because that’s what was in style, though it never felt right to them because they didn’t go with the green they loved.

I wish more people would use their own rudder to steer them to the colors they love, not what’s in. People who don’t live with color miss out on all the fun.

Q

What are some ways we can add unexpected dashes of color?

A

Surprising color can show up in a hot pink throw, a chartreuse ottoman, a canary yellow desk chair, a gutsy piece of modern art, or a stack of books with all cobalt covers.

Q

Do you have a sure-fire color formula anyone can use?

A

When creating a room’s color palette, think 60-30-10: a base color, two friends and a wildcard. For example, a strong neutral, like a sandy off-white, can be your 60% base. Add a couple of friends, say 30% blue and green, then toss in a 10% wild card of citron. Avoid 50-50 combinatio­ns, which fall flat.

It’s that unexpected color, that fuchsia that comes out of nowhere, that’s your zinger. You could repeat the wild card color a second time, but it’s almost better if it stands alone.

Q

Speaking of too much of a good thing, can you talk about restraint?

A

Picture a woman in that proverbial black dress. Her outfit comes alive when she adds a great hat and beads. But then she adds a print scarf, leopard-print shoes and bright red lipstick, and it’s a fail. You want to be careful the result doesn’t look gaudy. Add too much color, and you can’t see the accent anymore. Let it stand on its own.

Q

Does where we live make a difference in the colors we choose?

A

You definitely want to take color cues from your environmen­t. In Florida, where you have a brighter climate and water all around, you can use those bright, brilliant colors. In Montana or Wyoming, those colors would look garish against the dusty landscape; you would want to tone it down, maybe use more saddle.

Q

Can you tell me about your new pillows?

A

They are the ultimate mood lifter. Brightly colored pillows are such a great kickstart if you want to change up a room. A great throw pillow is a small investment that yields a high impact and can truly make the room. Syndicated columnist Marni Jameson is the author of five home and lifestyle books, including “Downsizing the Family Home: What to Save, What to Let Go” and “Downsizing the Blended Home: When Two Households Become One.” You may reach her at marnijames­on.com.

 ?? COURTESY OF SPACECRAFT­ING ?? Minneapoli­s designer Lucy Penfield at home with her colorful collection of new pillows for Missio Home.
COURTESY OF SPACECRAFT­ING Minneapoli­s designer Lucy Penfield at home with her colorful collection of new pillows for Missio Home.
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