Knock Knock
Painting the front door requires some planning. You have to leave the door open, a bit, for a long time! I’ve had the paint now for weeks. I’ve been so busy working long hours with crazy deadlines. I haven’t been around much. And, inevitably, after enjoying a three day retreat, I crashed. So I’m now sick with a cold….I’ve been lying on the couch this weekend and have exhausted my supply of Netflix “to watch” shows…
I thought this might be a good day to paint the front door. It’s warm and sunny, I’m not going anywhere and the painting part only took 20 minutes. The excitement of doing a small task will be therapeutic. The drying time will take all day…I can rest.
But let me go back to the beginning. The poor old door has been white for 10 years…I always hoped to put some colour on it. The house got painted this year, and a new roof put on…it was time!
So how does one go about choosing an accent colour? I do look at houses and make notes about what seems to catch my eye when I’m out for a walk. There’s also context: it does matter what color your neighbours already have, when making your choice. And, of course, what will go with your exterior house colour… and what will it look like when the door is open into your interior?
I landed on red or yellow, to go with my light gray house that has white trim. I thought it would be a nice pop of colour and contrast well.
Here’s how I usually go about making a decision – at my place – or at my clients’ places.
1) Since I’ve narrowed it down to red or yellow, I go through the paint chip box and find many, many chips of those two shade families. I don’t want the red to look “pink” at all, so I’m sticking to rusty reds.
2) I don’t “narrow down” at this point, because I find the various paint chips will look different when viewed in place. So this is the next step: tape them on the wall or wherever they will go and view them there… All of them.
3) Now start to narrow down, to a half dozen or a few candidates. Live with these for a while. Look at them during the day, and in the fading evening light, or at night with the porch light on. I walked out to the street to see what they looked like from there. And another time I drove home and parked out front and glanced up to see what they “felt” like after not seeing them for a while. This will sometimes change your mind.
4) Then narrow down to the finalists. I was torn between the red and the yellow…I know the rusty red would look better inside, in the living room…but I know reds do fade in the sunlight, and I thought that would mean the colour wouldn’t stay as sharp for as long on my south facing porch. Plus, I had some fabulous Black Eyed Susans in some pots – so yellow it was!
I’m happy with my happy coloured door. I know it will look bright and warm in the grey wet months later this year, and it will inspire my planting next spring too.