Too ter­ri­ble for words.

This week, I thought I would take a lit­tle detour from the usu­al post about how to pro-active­ly make your dwelling a more beau­ti­ful envi­ron­ment and dis­cuss how to avoid acci­den­tal­ly mak­ing your dwelling a hideous place.  The inspi­ra­tion for this post came from an impulse pur­chase at Home Depot about a month ago, and I learned a valu­able les­son — Sav­ing six dol­lars on a quart of paint is not a bar­gain if you haven’t tak­en the time to prop­er­ly select the col­or of said paint.  As a result, my hall­way trim now is now an un-loved bas­tard of a col­or born of prison-cell gray and the ultra-fetch­ing util­i­tar­i­an met­al trim found at any ele­men­tary school.  So, to save you all the heartache of repeat­ing this ter­ri­ble offense against col­or the­o­ry and good design aes­thet­ic, here are the lessons that I have learned:

Use cau­tion when apply­ing inspi­ra­tion — I know what you’re all think­ing — “Where on Earth did the choice to use gray paint come from when the adja­cent col­ors are hot pink and neon green and bright white?” Alas, a recent vis­it to Ikea Hack­ers led to an infat­u­a­tion with gray (you can see the gray in ques­tion in all it’s stun­ning glo­ry here), because the delight­ful­ly cre­ative Capree Kim­ball intro­duced it so well into her love­ly home.  How­ev­er, just because it works very well in her home, does not mean I can just willy nil­ly start paint­ing things gray in my home.

My hard earned design aes­thet­ic hinges on bright col­or and stark white, with no room for gray.  Though I am usu­al­ly pret­ty good with this, I have been remind­ed to take inspi­ra­tion into con­sid­er­a­tion and adapt it to fit my home, not just yank it out of a great pho­to and start painting.

Plan, plan, plan - The morn­ing I pur­chased the can of “Jail Cell Chic” start­ed like any oth­er Sat­ur­day.  After the oblig­a­tory vis­it to the bak­ery, JT and I went on our bi-week­ly pil­grim­age to Home Depot. When we moseyed into the paint depart­ment, and Oh Hap­py Day!  I found that they had a close­out on Martha Stew­art paint and a quart of high-gloss paint (nor­mal­ly $12), was marked down to $4!  I final­ly had the kick in the pants I need­ed to paint the “new” trim we installed the year pri­or.  So after about thir­ty sec­onds of delib­er­a­tion, we asked the polite gen­tle­man at the paint counter to mix us up a quart of what seemed like a “good” gray.

The prob­lem here, is that nor­mal­ly before let­ting just any col­or into my home, I run the sam­ple chips through a rig­or­ous test­ing process. I will hold the hues up to every oth­er col­or that might pos­si­bly come into visu­al con­tact with them (that’s right, if you can stand on a stool and lean out over the counter and the wall in ques­tion might align with that pil­low in the liv­ing room, they darn well bet­ter look visu­al­ly har­mo­nious).  In bypass­ing this test­ing and hap­haz­ard­ly pur­chas­ing the can of paint, I put my fate in the hands of the design gods, who, with­out prop­er wor­ship through design devel­op­ment, can be a pret­ty per­snick­ety bunch.

Live and Learn — It is inevitable that in the quest for the per­fect abode, you will fail from time to time.  The key to suc­cess is to not beat your­self up — the cre­ative process is full of fail­ures.  In the words of Mau­ry Ball­stein “We get back on the horse”, so take what you’ve learned and store it away for next time!  At any rate, it will come in handy when you are re-doing what­ev­er mess you’ve cre­at­ed in the first place!

So what will I take away from this das­tard­ly project?  1. High gloss paint looks ter­ri­ble on trim, unless you can spray it on.  2. A dark col­ored trim in a small area is way too over­whelm­ing and is more appro­pri­ate for a vic­to­ri­an-era home than a would-be mod­ern apart­ment.  3. Dark gray and hot pink look gross togeth­er.  4. It’s time to paint the upstairs trim bright white!

That’s all I have for this week — I hope you have found it both enter­tain­ing and edu­ca­tion­al.  As always, thank you for read­ing, and please feel free to share — just please give me cred­it for my work when you do!