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Kids room colors that will keep a child’s mind at rest

“Searching the site I found relevant
kids room colors to finish our child’s room.”




If you feel helpless when it comes to picking and blending colors, your answer could be as far away as your nearest pillow. Here is a quick way to create a kids room colors

Pick a Pattern

Starting with a pattern is the easiest way to create a color palette for your kid’s room. Choose a pattern from any object your child already have and love such as a pillow, picture or piece of furniture. This will be your color palette!

Select a light, medium and dark color from your pattern to be used as your foundation. You may want to go to a hardware store and select color chips from the paint department that match your pattern to carry with you in case you come across a great find and need to know if it matches.

Light, Medium and Dark

How you use these colors can affect the overall appearance of your room.

• Light- Is the Background- this is usually easy to achieve since most rentals are equipped with light to off-white walls.

• Medium- Large furniture and windows - Since the color of these objects will blend with the above lighter selection, the medium furniture will ground the room and give it a foundation.

• Darker- Accessories. Since your eye is drawn to a darker more intense color you will be able to arrange you accessories in a manner to guide the eye flowing through your room.

Kids room paint that produce feelings in a child’s rooms

It is a known fact that kids room colors can give different emotional feelings. Here are tips to how to make a room more comfortable.

• Orange, like red, tends to warm a room, but in a more friendly and welcoming way. As a result, paints in various shades and tints of orange work well in living rooms and family rooms.

• Yellow is also warm and welcoming, but it is more attention - getting than either red or orange. For this reason, it is a good paint color to use in poorly lit foyers or dark hallways.

• Blue, which is part of the cool color palette, makes us feel calm and tranquil, so it is ideal for use in bedrooms. But since blue works as an appetite suppressant (perhaps because there are few blue foods) it is not the best option for a dining room ... unless you're on a diet.

• Green is another relaxing color that is much more versatile than blue. Light greens are ideal for bedrooms and living rooms; because green is calming, it is often used in hospitals, workplaces and schools.

• Violet is a tricky color, psychologically speaking. Many adults dislike purples, but are fond of the rose family, which can work in many rooms, including bedrooms and libraries. Young children, on the other hand, respond favorably to violet, so this color can be used successfully in children's bedrooms and play areas.

These general guidelines are a good starting point in your search for a paint color. But remember that color choice is a very personal matter to your child. You're child is the one who has to live with your new paint color, so choose interior colors that suits you, and your child that will work with your home.



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Kids Room Colors


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