Los Angeles Times

Do things look a bit too rosy?

Pink is the color du jour in trendy areas. But it’s not a unanimous palette pleaser.

- By Valli Herman

If you were to consult a real estate agent or a paint manufactur­er about the appropriat­e colors for a home’s exterior, the reply would skew heavily to the light, neutral, inoffensiv­e wedge of the color wheel.

But not in Silver Lake. In the trendy Los Angeles neighborho­od, the wheel lately turns toward pink.

According to a January discussion on the social networking site Nextdoor, a pink home exterior trend has been bubbling in the artistic enclave, causing a minor hubbub about matters of taste, the effect on property values and suppositio­ns about homeowners’ appetite for hallucinog­ens.

In an era when Millennial Pink, Ultra Violet and Caliente have been crowned the colors of the year by various experts, perhaps it’s no surprise that the midcentury down the block matches your lipstick.

Pink, it seems, is having a home exterior moment.

Silver Lake resident Dan Miller covered the brownish-green hue of his hillside house with the cheerful Camellia Pink by Benjamin Moore 18 months ago.

“We were sick of all the sunabsorbi­ng dark colors that began proliferat­ing about a dozen years ago, but we didn’t want to go with white because of the glare,” said Miller, a librarian.

Pink can evoke innocence, girlhood and Barbie’s signature shade, and lately, a stronger brand of femininity.

“Pink was a very visible color last year,” said Ellen O’Neill, director of strategic design intelligen­ce for Benjamin Moore.

She cited the sustained presence of pink pussy hats, pink’s dominance in home decor and a democratiz­ation that’s making the hue more genderless and mature.

Such tastemaker outlets as Pinterest, Architectu­ral Digest

and Southern Living have recently extolled the virtues of pink front doors and home exteriors, even if local real estate agents are mixed on the effect on property values.

Sotheby’s Silver Lake agent Gail Crosby admires a fuchsia-accented home that’s across the street from her own house yet counsels clients to stay neutral for the widest possible appeal.

Silver Lake agent Karen Lower of Compass noted that a vivid red house recently set an area record, though some folks hate it. “You have to take into account the neighborho­od, current trends and what people find acceptable,” she said.

According to Silver Lake architectu­ral designer Carol Strober, pink is a traditiona­l desert color derived from the pinkish-tan of adobe mud and the pink-flecked flagstone of the Southwest.

In Southern California, pink complement­s our tile roofs, rosy sunsets and bougainvil­lea blossoms.

“People do tend to pick palettes to correspond with what lies beyond the window,” O’Neill said.

Pink also makes homes memorable.

“They are basically almost like a celebrity, a neighborho­od hallmark,” O’Neill said.

Indeed, comments in the Nextdoor thread about the area’s pink houses described an underconst­ruction home with a fuchsia wall and a chrome-paneled garage door as “pretty dope.”

Full disclosure: I live in a pinkish house and tested the area’s sentiment in a Nextdoor poll about pink homes. Turns out most of the people were OK with pink, and only 14% agreed with the statement “Pink is a disgusting, property-value deflating color for house exteriors.” It seems you have a less than 1 in 5 chance of getting hate mail from your neighbors if you coat the stucco in Pink Parfait.

Meanwhile, the California Realtors Assn. in Los Feliz said it hasn’t studied the resale value of pink homes.

Pink grows on you. In 2012, when Patrick Terrill bought one of the 23 small-lot homes in the Mews, an eco-friendly developmen­t in Atwater Village, the second-floor exterior was a bright, tropical pink.

“Now I wouldn’t change it,” Terrill said. “I like it.”

It’s become such a landmark that he tells visitors to look for the lone pink house.

He even printed hot-pink Tshirts with its image to celebrate the housewarmi­ng.

Pink homes are in keeping with the area’s taste for vivid shades, according to Peggy McCloud, owner of Jill’s Paint in Atwater Village.

As the unofficial home-color historian of greater Silver Lake, McCloud recounted the many notable color palettes she sees: purple, orange, mud and Pepto-Bismol.

“You’re never going to see those colors in a planned community with an HOA,” she said. “That’s what makes Silver Lake eclectic. You’ve got the musicians, the artists here, so anything goes.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? PATRICK TERRILL, who owns a pink home in Atwater Village, says he’s grown fond of the color: “Now I wouldn’t change it.”
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times PATRICK TERRILL, who owns a pink home in Atwater Village, says he’s grown fond of the color: “Now I wouldn’t change it.”
 ??  ?? PINK IS considered a desert color derived from adobe mud and Southweste­rn flagstone. Above, a home in Silver Lake.
PINK IS considered a desert color derived from adobe mud and Southweste­rn flagstone. Above, a home in Silver Lake.
 ??  ?? SELLERS SHOULD think about what’s appropriat­e for the neighborho­od, says one agent. This house is in Silver Lake.
SELLERS SHOULD think about what’s appropriat­e for the neighborho­od, says one agent. This house is in Silver Lake.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? THIS IN-YOUR-FACE color on Kenilworth Avenue in Silver Lake is in keeping with the area’s taste for vivid shades and can make a home a neighborho­od celebrity.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times THIS IN-YOUR-FACE color on Kenilworth Avenue in Silver Lake is in keeping with the area’s taste for vivid shades and can make a home a neighborho­od celebrity.

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