6 minute read

THE PROS AND CONS OF BOLD COLORS

the home three years before, and Dr. Larsen and his wife trusted me. Little did they know, I had no clue how to build the three simple walls needed for the small new bathroom.

Advertisement

By Tim Carter

DIo you want to build a new wall inside your home? Perhaps you're trying to create a new small space for a home office or hobby room, or maybe you have a bigger appetite and are transforming a dank basement into a finished living space. But you have no idea where to start. I've been there. I've experienced your anxiety.

've had the distinct pleasure of attending numerous editors' conferences over the years sponsored by different manufacturers. I've toured plants that heat-treat hand tools and factories that make everything from saw blades to small engines, to name a few. Each experience is like Christmas morning to me because I got to see new tools and products of my trade.

One of the most fascinating tours was of a paint factory on the West Coast. We got to see the early stages of making a batch of interior paint. I believe the size of the vat was at least 5,000 gallons, but it could have been as much as 10,000 gallons. You need a massive metal stirring paddle to blend all the ingredients. Forget about using a wood stick!

Every now and then it's interesting to go back in time. I clearly remember having to build my firstpartition wall insidea house. I was a soaking wet-behind-theears carpenter working for a small remodeling company. One of my college professors, Dr. Larsen, had asked me to install a half bathroom in his home. I had no idea what to do, so I told him that my boss could do the job.

The most interesting part of the tour for me was the session spent with the on-staff color expert. She explained all the nuances of color, how the slightest shades of color can affect how you feel – indeed, how certain colors can deeply affect your mood.

Once the simple plans were drawn and the contract signed, I was sentto my professor's houseto start the job. I had painted the outside of

If you have toured any open houses recently, you have almost certainly noticed the mania for gray paint. It's rare to find a house that doesn't have at leas one interior room done up in a shade of gray. Visit an art museum and you might not even notice that the walls are often painted gray. It's an interesting color that actually is the absence of color. It makes sense in an art museum: The walls are the background and shouldn't compete with the paintings and photographs.

Gray is most often created mixing pure white paint with some amount of black pigment. When most people think about color, they tend to think about every other color in the rainbow other than white or black. Gray provides a very interesting background for all other colors you might put in the rooms of your home just as it does in a museum.

That being said, you may be like my

I survived with the help of a few phone calls to my boss. It was a humbling experience as I discovered you don't know what

You can't always do this in an existing home, especially if the ceilings in the room are finished with drywall or plaster. As you tilt the wall up, it binds against the ceiling. If you're challenged by a finished ceiling, you'll most likely have to install your top and bottom plates, making sure the plates are your it at rough measurements son. He bought a new home that came on the market last spring. The builder had already painted all the rooms a medium gray for the aforementioned reason. Yet when I toured the house with my son, he said: "Dad, what the heck? I don't want to wake up each day thinking I'm a sailor on a battleship. It's just way too much gray! How hard would it be to paint the rooms over?" you don't know. Keep in mind this was decades before the Internet and YouTube. You have no idea what an advantage you now have when you have to educate yourself about how to repair and build things around your home. Count your blessings! plumb in the same plane. You'll then cut each wall stud to fit snugly between the plates and toenail them in place. Drill angled pilot holes in the ends of the wall studs for the nails. Use no less than 3-inch-long 16d sinker nails to connect the wall studs to the plates.

I recommend that if you're on the fence as to what colors to use in your home, simply buy a quart and paint one wall.

Building a new interior wall in an existing housecan bemuch different from doing it on a new home job site. When we carpenters build a wall for a new home, we typically build itflaton thefloor. Onceall the studs are nailed to the bottom and top plates, we tilt the wall up and secure it so it doesn't fall over.

I answered him that we could easily repaint half the rooms in the twobedroom house in just three days. I told him it depended on the colors he'd choose, as some lighter colors such as yellow might require two coats.

He decided he wanted to do an experiment and go with some very bold colors. I thought he was making a mistake. His mother and I both warned him that a color on a small strip of paper from the paint store may look much darker once that color is on the wall. This happens because there's just so much color hitting your eyes than when you're looking at a sample that's 2 inches wide and maybe 3/4-inch tall.

"Dad, paint isn't that expensive," he said, "and since you're helping and it doesn't take long I can always repaint the room."

Oh, how convenient that your dad can help you for the price of a free lunch! If you have children, I'm sure you've been conscripted to help with projects. To be honest, I loved working on his house.

The first room we painted was his living room. He chose a deep blue color. When I opened the can, I gasped as quietly as I could, thinking it was a huge mistake. The gray wall color happened to be a superb base, and the blue covered it in one coat with ease. It was a bright, sunny spring day, and, much to my surprise, after the first wall was finished it looked amazing. I had thought it would make the room appear too small, but I didn't get that feeling. The other benefit to blue is that it's a calming color.

If there is no ceiling, you can tilt the wall up so long as you orient the wall in the same direction as thefloor joists above. You simply make sure the top of the wall rises up in between two parallel floor joists. Once the wall is vertical, you can then slide it into position under of the where attached the door. measurement. of your much frame the door. betrimming when you want between the top You height just the factory Trustme, install drywall gap between and the ©2021 Content

The kitchen was painted a stunning yellow much like a sunflower, the dining room was transformed using a deep spicy reddish brown, and his rear sunroom was coated with a stunning medium green.

After we were finished, I had to his admit that the bold colors in t open-concept house not only looked spectacular, but they also didn't clash. Once he started to hang paintings and fabrics on the wall, the colors looked even better.

I recommend that if you're on the fence as to what colors to use in your home, simply buy a quartand paint one wall. Understand that the color may look somewhat different at night than it does in the day. Experiment with flat paint vs. semi-gloss. You may find that makes a difference. No matter what, if you don't like the color, you can repaint a typical room in just hours.

Be brave! Try a bold color or two and you'll avoid that feeling that you're swabbing decks on a battleship when you mop your kitchen floor!

Amazing Westerly Views

1 Acre View Building lot

Don't miss out on building in one of Skagit County's most soughtafter new neighborhoods! Quiet hillside retreat with amazing views of Skagit Valley, Samish Bay, the San Juan Islands, Anacortes, and the Olympic Mountains. Serviced by city water. Quick access to I-5, 3-minutes to Mount Vernon, 30-minutes to Bellingham, and 1-hour to Seattle. Gentle slope w/ potential for more useable space. Septic system permit completed & access permit approved. Ready for you to build your dream home!

#1992310 | $299,000 internet. Built-in Bose speakers. 960sf garage. #1975189 | $775,000

Mount Vernon

NW CONTEMPORARY Thunderbird 3BD 3BA 2487sf w/ vaulted, beamed ceiling in the living room. Dining room w/window seat & 2 sliding doors to covered brick patio. Upstairs bonus room/ o ce/guest bedroom. 1/3 acre lot. #2008624 | $620,000

Sedrowoolley

INVESTMENT POTENTIAL Classic 4BD 2.5BA 2560sf farmhouse on 1.76 acres. Kitchen w/island & ceramic tile floors. Office + bonus room. Living room w/ fireplace & built-in bookshelves. 16,000sf pole barn w/ bathroom. #2028784 | $935,000

CLOSE TO EVERYTHING! 3BD 1BA 1046sf rambler w/ large 2-tier deck with built-in bench seating. New roof this year! Extra storage above garage. Fenced back yard on a nice low-tra c street. Close to schools, shopping, hospital, I-5 access. #1995422 | $420,000

This article is from: