The Mercury News

Ignore the color of the year, or add a touch of it

- Marni Jameson At home

When it announced “Classic Blue” as the 2020 color of the year, the Pantone Color Institute, a leading authority on color trends, said: “Instilling calm, confidence and connection, this enduring blue hue highlights our desire for a dependable and stable foundation … as we cross the threshold into a new era.”

Wow. It just looks like blue to me.

But wait. Behr, Home Depot’s paint brand, declared Back to Nature, as the 2020 COTY (that’s industry shorthand for Color of the Year), “a restorativ­e and revitalizi­ng green hue that engages the senses.”

Meanwhile, Benjamin Moore & Co. chose First Light, “a warm, rosy pink that symbolizes an upbeat and hopeful start to the next 10 years.”

Would the real Color of the Year please stand up?

The colorful fad frenzy started when Pantone came out with its first color of the year in 1999. The announceme­nts soon became national news, prompting paint companies to name colors of the year and draw attention to their brands. Now we have nearly a dozen paint companies announcing their COTYS.

If anyone could help me make sense of the hue and cry, I thought it would be a UCLA art professor and textile designer I took a color theory class from more than 20 years ago. I tracked down Michael Schrier through Los Angeles’ Otis College of Art and Design, where he continues to teach color theory to tomorrow’s artists and designers, to ask him what — if anything — consumers were to make of these au courant colors.

Q

Nobody in their right mind is going to repaint or redecorate based on one company’s COTY, which will change next year. So what are we supposed to do with this informatio­n? A Stated color trends are for marketing purposes, but that’s not all bad. Colors of the year may draw you in to look at a particular paint color, but more helpful is seeing the color palettes companies put with that color.

What’s trending up or down isn’t as important as discoverin­g what appeals to you — because the trend will be over with, but you won’t be. Trends are at their best when they trip an idea and let you see your space in new ways.

The palettes are a wonderful, easy way to give people confidence and confirmati­on that certain colors work together. This access to palettes wasn’t available to consumers five years ago. But the way color is presented in the market today can cut out the need for a designer. Q How can we use a trend color in our home, knowing that it’s a trend? A If you’re trying to have some relationsh­ip to a trend, look at what you have and try to spot the color into your environmen­t. Add a pop of Classic Blue with a vase or a pillow. Choosing color accents from among those you already have will be better than going into Home Goods or Target and choosing six accessorie­s that happen to be the color du jour.

Q

What color mistakes should DIY decorators avoid?

A

A home where everything is of the same color value, where there’s no differenti­ation, and all the colors are of one note. Q In class, you told us what every room should have and made us design a room’s color board accordingl­y. Is your musthave list the same? A It hasn’t changed. All rooms should have a color that is high in value and one low in value, (something light and something dark), a warm color and a cool one, a neutral and a spike — a punch of something surprising that energizes the space, like a pop of cranberry, a leopard-print pillow, a-cut crystal bowl that refracts the light. Spikes catch the eye. Q

What do you wish more home decorators knew about color?

A

Have your own sense of identity in terms of how you want to use color in your environmen­t. That alone should guide your choice, not some trend. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t look at trends or pay attention. If you’re at a loss for what to do, trend color palettes can offer some guidance, but make decisions based on what you respond to.

Q

What is design success?

A

Design implies intention, and intention implies thought, no matter what the color is. When you walk into a home that has a great current color palette and no intention, it feels hollow. If someone comes into your space and feels that you’ve put it together with thought and intention, and that it expresses you, whether it’s trendy or not, that’s success. Syndicated columnist Marni Jameson is the author of five home and lifestyle books, “Downsizing the Blended Home When Two Households Become One” (Sterling Publishing, 2019) and “Downsizing the Family Home — What to Save, What to Let Go.” You may reach her at marnijames­on.com.

 ?? COURTESY OF PAINTZEN ?? Chinese Porcelain, the color on the wall behind the bed, is PPG’S 2020 Color of the Year.
COURTESY OF PAINTZEN Chinese Porcelain, the color on the wall behind the bed, is PPG’S 2020 Color of the Year.
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