Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Color for a gray day


The colors in this bag say it all...

Ronson Tote
See:

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Subtle Color

Last weekend I went through my spices and organized them into small, labeled neat little bottles. I threw out old spices that were beyond their prime for cooking, but certainly not for being photographed and enjoyed for their color. Check it out...




Saturday, January 16, 2010

Color Palettes - slides & paint


At work yesterday, I was pulling poor quality 35mm slides from the Ithaca College slide collection. I was choosing the slides to de-accession primarily based on color. Slides have three dye layers (cyan, yellow & magenta). When the cyan and yellow layers have disintegrated, only magenta is left. However, I happen to have all levels of red, magenta, cyan, yellow, and purple shades here. The palette of colors here is wonderful to view.

Last night I had dinner with some friends, one of whom is a painter (David Schaffner). He uses a piece of glass as his palette and this example is from one that he recently retired. I loved the contrast of the two different mediums, one - 35mm slides mounted in glass mounts, the other paint on glass.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Pottery Barn + BM

Check out the Pottery Barn web site to see their selection of Benjamin Moore colors... especially nice is their descriptions of why they like certain colors...for example for Caliente Red they write that is both relaxing and rejuvenating and I agree - it is FUN to wake up in a red room ! Check it out for color ideas and suggestions for different rooms in your house.












Sunday, January 10, 2010

You are what you eat (color...)

Flamingos get their pink color from the shrimp they eat...the more they eat, the deeper PINK they get ! How cool is that ? According to wikipedia:

"Young flamingos hatch with gray plumage, but adults range from light pink to bright red due to aqueous bacteria and beta carotene obtained from their food supply. A well-fed, healthy flamingo is more vibrantly coloured and thus a more desirable mate."


Thursday, January 7, 2010

Color Trends for 2010 (part 1)

According to Benjamin Moore, GREEN is the color of the year for 2010, along with neutrals.


Colors shown here are; Pale Celery, Meditation & Cedar Green

Some sources say gray, oatmeal and stone will be the colors of choice, with citron, orange and purple as accents.

(From: http://www.remodelista.com/products/alphabet-sofa )

I am leaning towards enjoying the calmness of the gray, oatmeal and stone palette. Here are a few other examples.


(From: www.potterybarn.com )

(From: www.restorationhardware.com )

and then there's Pantone - and their color of the year for 2010 is well...
let's just say it's "not my favorite."








Sunday, January 3, 2010

Winter White (s)

Sometimes I hear people say they want their rooms painted white - however, to me, that means an infinite number of possibilites. For example, Benjamin Moore has over 140 whites available in their Off-White collection alone.


Benjamin Moore whites selection

Winter white is an interesting name for a color - usually it means a cool white in paint(with blue in it), however, very often different paint companies interpret the color differently - sometimes adding yellow to make it a creamier white (cream, ivory, ecru) (usually for clothing).



Sherwin-Williams' whites (only a few of them!)



If you think of snow as white - listen up...snow is actually colorless. It appears white because light is so scattered when it hits the snow reflecting back all the colors in light. Depending on where you find the snow, snow can actually appear red, blue, black, green, and more.

["No one really ever sees one snowflake at a time. Most of the time, we see huge collections of millions of snowflakes on the ground. As light hits the snow on the ground, there are so many locations for light to be reflected, that no single wavelength of light gets absorbed or reflected with any consistency. Most all of the white light from the sun hitting the snow will reflect back and still be white light. Therefore, snow on the ground appears white.
One other important point to remember is that snow is indeed tiny ice crystals. Ice itself is not transparent like the glass in a window, but translucent. Light does not pass through ice easily. Instead, it bounces around back and forth within the ice crystals. As the light inside an ice crystal bounces around off the interior surfaces, some light is reflected and other light is absorbed. With the millions of ice crystals in a layer of snow, all this bouncing, reflecting, and absorbing leads to a neutral ground. That means there is no preference to one side of the visible spectrum (red) or the other side (violet) to be absorbed or reflected. The sum total of all that bouncing leads to white.

The Color of Glaciers

Glacial ice will often take on a blue color. Remember, an accumulation of snow has a lot of air separating the snowflakes. Glaciers are different. Glacial ice is not the same as snow. Snowflakes accumulate and get packed together to form a solid and mobile layer of ice. Much of the air that was separating snowflakes is now squeezed out of the ice layer.
As light enters a deep layer of ice, the light gets bent causing more and more of the red end of the spectrum to be absorbed. As more red wavelengths are absorbed, more blue wavelengths are available to reflect back to your eyes. The color of glacier ice will then appear blue.

The Varied Colors of Snow

With blue and white snow or ice, many people wonder if snow can take on other colors. In some instances, impurities in snow are what cause it to appear a different color. For instance, algae can grow on snow making it appear more red, orange, or green. Dirt and debris near a road can make snow appear gray or black."]

(From: http://weather.about.com/od/winterweather/a/snow_white.htm )