Regina Leader-Post

Can a bold colour of the year find a home in home decor?

- KIM COOK

When Pantone LLC announced that emerald green was its Colour of the Year for 2013, reaction among designers and interior consultant­s was mixed.

The company, which creates and matches colours for the home and fashion industries, picks a top hue each year based on current use and expected continued popularity.

For New York colour consultant Debra Kling, emerald green’s boldness means it should be used only as an accent.

“Emerald might be one of those polarizing colours like purple — you either love it or hate it, and certainly could get tired of it fast,” she says.

Other shelter style arbiters, however, such as Elle Decor, heralded the colour by featuring luxe goods in emerald green, including fabrics from Scalamandr­e, Schumacher and Phillip Jeffries, and Baccarat water glasses.

Greens have been strong for a while because of interest in nature, said Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of Pantone’s research arm known as the Pantone Color Institute. She calls green “a colour of growth, renewal, healing, unity and regenerati­on.”

So can you decorate with emerald green without becoming overwhelme­d by it?

New York designer Elaine Griffin thinks you can, as long as you’re careful.

“There ’s no getting around it, emerald is flat out dramatic. Which means it’s best used in small doses, as accessorie­s,” she says.

For those liking the colour enough to consider paint, Griffin has a suggestion. “True emerald should go in tiny spaces like foyers or powder rooms, and then dining rooms, which always benefit from a theatrical touch. But it’s too harsh a colour for rooms in which you linger.”

Consider malachite accessorie­s.

“Malachite is emerald at its best, so take your inspiratio­n from there. Malachite boxes, printed fabrics like Tony Duquette’s for Jim Thompson, bedecked plates and table lamps are all fab,” Griffin says.

Some colours pair well with emerald, and can give a visual pop to a room. Griffin likes yellow and brown, “like a sun-dappled forest.” As preppy go-withs, try raspberry, peacock, Prussian blue, pale rhubarb and turquoise.

And Kling notes that emerald pairs well with other greens: “In contrast to any other colour family, the human eye perceives that no two greens clash ... we’re accustomed to seeing every variant of green coexisting harmonious­ly in nature.”

Where shouldn’t you use the hue?

“Avoid upholsteri­ng a longterm piece like a sofa in emerald — I promise the visual thrill will be gone in a matter of months,” Griffin says.

 ?? JCPENNEY PHOTO ?? In a new partnershi­p with Pantone, JCPenney launches a bedding and bath collection that
includes emerald green, Pantone’s Color of the Year.
JCPENNEY PHOTO In a new partnershi­p with Pantone, JCPenney launches a bedding and bath collection that includes emerald green, Pantone’s Color of the Year.

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