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Psychology Of Color In Interior Design

When the average person considers the design and appearance of their home, they simply choose features that appeal to their style and comfort. However, research shows that homeowners may want to spend more time thinking about the specific decisions they make. After all, everything from the textures and colors you use to the scents and sounds you incorporate can directly

Colors Make a Major Difference If there’s one aspect of interior design that matters most, it’s color theory. While the difference between one shade and another may seem subtle, the psychological effect can be significant. “I’ve always liked the idea that by adding a certain color or combinations of colors, you can simply change your mood, your room by creating optical illusion and making it smaller or bigger and so on,” says Ion Nicolae of DesignLike.com. The problem is that most people don’t understand color theory and how different tones produce different illusions.

At the very heart of color theory is the colorwheel. The wheel simply provides a visual representation of the 12 basic colors. These include primary colors, secondary colors, and tertiary colors. Using this color wheel, designers follow different rules and strategies for creating balanced rooms. They take into account things like temperature, tone, contrast, and color wheel relationships. Bright colors are used to make a room appear bigger, while simultaneously inducing a lighter, carefree mood. Dark colors typically make a room feel smaller and more intimate. “Colors give us a certain state of mind, can energize us, can cheer us, can make us feel safe, calm, relax, can increase the ability to concentrate or remember us pleasant things,” says Nicolae. But there are also colors that depress us and make us feel tired. It’s important to identify which colors produce which emotions in each individual.


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