Miami Herald (Sunday)

To add drama to a room, try painting the ceiling

- BY HANNAH SELINGER The Washington Post

Whether a space is small or oversized and cavernous, mirrors can make a significan­t impact. For small spaces, mirrors can truly help make a space feel larger and more open, while in an overly large space, mirrors can act like windows to reflect color and light. What are some of the best ways to use mirrors? How should they be hung? Mirrors used purposeful­ly and creatively can make a room. Here are

My husband and I are moving to a house with a complicate­d room, a room that requires a vision.

We had selected a color for the space in question, a den-like, narrow family room with a feature fireplace: Benjamin Moore’s Bavarian Forest, a deep shade in the blue-green family. But the line that determined what was ceiling and what was wall was uncertain, my painter pointed out, which was why he suggested it. “I think you paint the ceilings,” he said. I imagined the room swathed in deep green, from the trim to the brick fireplace to, yes, the ceilings. He was right. I told him to do it.

Extending color to the ceiling can add visual interest, texture and sophistica­tion to a room, without much effort. Here’s why you should try it, and how to implement it in your own home. Sophistica­tion on a budget. Although homeowners have many choices when it comes to adding interest to the ceiling, not all of them are equal. Tray, coffered and beamed ceilings, for instance, change the feel of a room, but they come at a cost, says Arianna Cesa, associate manager of color marketing and developmen­t at Benjamin

Moore. “Painting your ceiling is the most budget-friendly upgrade if you are looking to add a design element to your ceiling,” she says. “It can absolutely change the look and feel of a space.”

Unlike other ceiling treatments that cost more money and require a firm design commitment, it’s easy to change paint if you don’t like it, says Hannah Galbreath, owner and designer at Hannah Galbreath Design in Salt

Lake City. And if your budget does not allow for a profession­al painter, you can take the job on yourself. “It’s something that anyone can do,” Galbreath says. “It’s low-cost, low-consequenc­e.”

Maximum warmth. Smaller rooms, such as dens and offices, can benefit from deep, saturated ceiling colors, which can add subtle warmth, Cesa says. “Darker paint colors can be comforting and cozy,” she adds. “Bringing that color onto the ceiling allows you to be completely enveloped in that hue.” She advises saving this technique for rooms with plenty of light to avoid a “cavelike” feeling. “If the room doesn’t have natural lighting, consider bringing in additional artificial lighting sources,” she says.

“You are trying to create more floor. Many people hang mirrors too high or too

low.

Place mirrors in spaces that don’t get much light such as intimacy,” says Jesse Hunnefeld, owner of Hunnefeld Painting in Massachuse­tts. He adds that painting a ceiling — particular­ly in a smaller room or in one with an unusually shaped ceiling — is a good way to draw the room in, creating boundaries and intimacy without adding artificial architectu­ral elements that may cost money and require more time and materials.

A sense of continuity. In rooms where there is no natural 90degree line between walls and ceiling, painting the ceiling may be the best choice for a clean, crisp look, Hunnefeld says. “You don’t have a natural break, visually, that you do when you have 90-degree perpendicu­lar angles,” he says. “So you’d have to re-create that line, and recreating that line is complicate­d in technique, because you’d

Awindowles­s rooms.

Consider large-scale mirrors as an alternativ­e to artwork. Hang mirrors of various sizes and shapes in a vignette if looking for an interestin­g wall feature.

AAbasicall­y have to freehand.” Painting that line by hand, he says, can leave you with a lesspolish­ed look. Extending the color up the wall to the ceiling mitigates this problem.

“In some homes, where you might have a bullnose, or a rounded wall, rather than creating an artificial line — whether it’s a horizontal line or a vertical line — just continuing the paint doesn’t create visual truncation,” Galbreath says. “It allows you to continue your view upward.” The room, she says, runs in a single visual plane, as opposed to in several disconnect­ed and choppy planes that draw the eye back and forth.

Contrastin­g sheens. Even in a room where the ceiling is the same color as the walls, you can create contrast with a paint’s sheen. Hunnefeld suggests using a semi-gloss or high-gloss paint on accent points, such as the trim, so the eye picks up different elements in the room. “It’s a juxtaposit­ion, and it can be very subtle,” he says. In a room where the color is all the same, the difference­s are visible in how the light hits the pigment. That’s where sheen can be important. The illusion of space. Although one common fear of painting a ceiling with darker colors lies in closing a room in, the truth is that a deeply saturated ceiling can actually enlarge a space. “It helps to blur the lines and edges of the space,” Cesa says. “It can make small rooms feel larger.”

Galbreath agrees. “It can sort of make the ceiling go away,” she says. When you use different paint colors, she says, you are accentuati­ng the difference between wall and ceiling.

Do a test run. Painting your ceiling with color is not without pitfalls, especially if you choose a highly stylized look. Hunnefeld says a ceiling that is both pigmented and rich in sheen hides nothing, and slight imperfecti­ons in drywall are also more apt to leap to the surface. And if your ceiling has a textured finish, it’s best to stick with white paint.

If you decide that color is the way to go, Galbreath says that testing is important to determine how the color will play out in your space and its lighting. She suggests painting large samples next to one another, marked clearly.

“I don’t think you can talk about paint color without talking about light,” she says. “Paint a lot of swatches. Make them big enough that you get the impact of what the room would feel like if it were to be painted in that color. Do it on every wall, if you can, just so you can see the way the color lives throughout the day.”

 ?? SCOTT GABRIEL MORRIS TNS ?? Mirrors hung in a grid help mimic the look of windows in this living space.
.
A large round mirror serves as a visual anchor in a living space with
fireplace.
A row of mirrors helps to create a sense of depth in a hallway.
SCOTT GABRIEL MORRIS TNS Mirrors hung in a grid help mimic the look of windows in this living space. . A large round mirror serves as a visual anchor in a living space with fireplace. A row of mirrors helps to create a sense of depth in a hallway.
 ?? Courtesy Benjamin Moore ?? A painted ceiling is a budget-friendly upgrade that can add visual interest to a room.
Courtesy Benjamin Moore A painted ceiling is a budget-friendly upgrade that can add visual interest to a room.

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