Finding Your Just Right: Do’s and Don’ts of Sampling Paint Colors

Tired of staring at the same old walls? It happens. The good news is that a new look is just a paint brush away. Before you crack open a can of paint, let’s talk about how to pick the right color. Properly sampling your new hue before you spread it on the wall will prevent any painter's remorse from setting in after the last drop of paint has dried. Here are tips to get you started on the right path.

Do consider the big picture.

Your room is one of several nestled inside your home. You may want to spiff up your personal space with a new palette, but don’t go too far off your own beaten path. What rooms will be visible from the room you’re painting? For example, will the color of your living room complement the shade of your kitchen walls? Think about what mood you’re looking to strike. Do you want a serene bedroom, an energized rec room or a focused in-home office? How about the existing furniture and accessories in your room; what color family is going to match those best? Start searching for your new paint in color ranges that work with the answers to those questions. Then hit up your favorite shop to purchase small sample-sized containers of your favorites. 

Don’t paint your sample directly on your wall.

You picked up a container of paint to sample, which was a good move; just don’t swath it on the wall itself. This presents two distinct problems. First, your painted on sample is limited to a single view. You won’t know how the color looks in the recess of the corner of your room when you’ve painted the swatch on the wall opposite your large picture window. Second, painting your swatch directly on the wall creates more work for yourself. In order to achieve a smooth finish for your newly painted wall, you’re going to have to sand and prime that sample space before you paint the whole room. 

Don’t settle for the 2x2 inch sample from the hardware store either.

The solution to not painting your sample on the wall isn’t to rely on the small wedges of color on a strip of color wedges. To make a truly informed choice of what the color looks like on your wall you need to see the bigger swatch size than those chips are going to give you.  I know what you’re thinking, “If I can’t paint my swatch on the wall and I can’t rely on that little paint chip, what exactly can I do?” You can create your own paint swatches using the sample paint you picked up and poster board or self-adhesive sheets. (You’ll find those at a paint store.) Apply your sample paint to the board or sheet and then hang your self-created swatch in the room. And don’t limit yourself to one space, either. Live with the sample on the wall across from that beautiful picture window for a day or two. Then move it to another wall and see what the light does to the color throughout the day.

by Anjie Cho


3 Simple Ways to Create an Inspiring Space with Feng Shui

featured this week on elephant journal

Life is like a sine curve—there are ups and downs—and sometimes when things are down, we need inspiration to swing back up.

Things have been a little light on the motivation side for me lately, and that’s okay—but as it started to drag on, I realized it might be time to request some encouragement from my environment using feng shui.

Feng shui is the Asian art of placement—and my modus operandi (method or approach) for everything—but it’s much more than just moving furniture around. Everything in our space carries energy and affects us, and through feng shui, we can adjust that energy and our space to create more positive effects and opportunities in life.

...read full article

by Anjie Cho


New Year's Inspiration with Your Own Personal Shrine

First, HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!! I hope it was wonderful and relaxing for everyone. I stayed in the neighborhood and shared an inspiring toast to the future with some friends and my husband.

Ok, moving along :) In my last podcast, Feng Shui and the Winter Solstice, I shared some ways to welcome the winter and new year into your home and life. Instead of just writing up a list of new year's "resolutions," I offered a way in which to create a personal shrine to embody how you want to FEEL in 2016. 

Here are the instructions! Note: I'm sharing the one I created in this post.

Materials:

  • Photographs and/or small items that are special and feel inspiring to you. My selections:
    • Celestite crystals, an angelic and spiritual stone
    • Origami paper crane, white for precision, and the paper crane as a nod to creativity and the story of folding a Thousand Origami Cranes to receive one wish
    • Blessed feng shui cinnabar rice in a red envelope from a teacher, for protection, wisdom and to honor the feng shui lineage that so inspires me
  • Mint tin, match book, any small box
    • I found this old mint box that held some paperclips. And how PERFECT, I opened it up and was reminded of the quote printed inside:
    • "Every thought we think is creating our future" Louise L. Hay
  • Other decorative materials such as paper, plant life, ribbons, shiny things
    • I found a mirror-like silver paper and a beautiful gold satin ribbon
  • Glue to put it all together!

Directions:

  • Decorate the interior of the box with your special objects. Keep in mind the FEELING you want to embody and be inspired by. 
  • Find a special place for it or carry it with you!

Please send along photos of your personal shrine! I hope this project inspires you!

Note: I'm sharing this (somewhat modified) DIY activity from the Winter catalog for the Rubin Museum. The Rubin Museum of Art "is an arts and cultural hub in New York City’s vibrant Chelsea neighborhood that inspires visitors to make connections between contemporary life and the art and ideas of the Himalayas, India, and neighboring regions." Be sure to check it out if you're ever in NYC!

by Anjie Cho