This segment is so very well done. Kudos to Sharon Grech for putting it together, and kudos to the entire team at Cityline for allowing her the time to demonstrate this use of cool/neutral/warm so effectively.
This is great, super helpful. Thank you! I have watched about 10 videos on whites and this makes the choices very clear: light and what color your furniture is. Got it! Neutral white for me as I have black and red in my space.
I have Mascarpone cabinets in the kitchen. Your video (especially the huge board with the 3 background shades) helped me decide on White Dawn for walls and Simply White for trim and ceiling. Thank you!
This video is very helpful. I have a tile wall like paper white with a floor that imitate wood with beige and brown color. I've been looking for a white color for the vanity but I can't to decide because I am worry that it look blue or yellow. Could you suggest me any of the white colors?. Thank you for your help.
"Light Gray" and "Light Cream" aren't "White" so you can really throw away about 90% of your "Whites" ..... Just because a paint chip has "white" in the name doesn't mean it is white ..... After about 5 "whites" , the rest are light gray light biege light cream light pink light green , etc etc etc ..... Light Gray is simply NOT "white" , and yes I know there are different "whites" but once you vary quite a bit , it's not white anymore , don't care what the paint chip name says .....
Some people want a softer white vs a stark white. This allows them to play around with contrasts and undertones. White doesn’t have to look like paper, but can have depth as well.
@@GermanyandIllionis LOOK at the chart she provides @0:20 (pause it) ..... LOOK REAL GOOD at that chart and tell me how many samples are "WHITE" ..... I see about 5-10 (tops) out of 200 that I would call "WHITE"
I had to learn the hard expensive way that lighting is critical to really seeing your colors.
This segment is so very well done. Kudos to Sharon Grech for putting it together, and kudos to the entire team at Cityline for allowing her the time to demonstrate this use of cool/neutral/warm so effectively.
So nice to hear someone actually explain about how to use warm vs. cool. So much to consider! Thanks!
This is great, super helpful. Thank you! I have watched about 10 videos on whites and this makes the choices very clear: light and what color your furniture is. Got it! Neutral white for me as I have black and red in my space.
Whites and creams can reflect grass and trees outside from west and south facing rooms.
Thanks for explaining. No one has done anything like this for me. Thank you 🙏
I tried 17 different "whites" in my north facing, one window kitchen. Settled on SW Shell white. It was a hair pulling decision.
I have Mascarpone cabinets in the kitchen. Your video (especially the huge board with the 3 background shades) helped me decide on White Dawn for walls and Simply White for trim and ceiling. Thank you!
Thanks for the samples !
White chocolate is my fave Benjamin Moore! I literally had to borrow the entire swatch card of whites to be able to choose🤣
This video is very helpful. I have a tile wall like paper white with a floor that imitate wood with beige and brown color. I've been looking for a white color for the vanity but I can't to decide because I am worry that it look blue or yellow. Could you suggest me any of the white colors?. Thank you for your help.
This would have gone so much better if they agreed beforehand who would be giving g the presentation
Mascarpone was too yellow in our space went with cloud white for just enough warmth
Benjamin Moore , Behr paint is American company , buy Beauti tone paint it made buy Canadian company
"Light Gray" and "Light Cream" aren't "White" so you can really throw away about 90% of your "Whites" ..... Just because a paint chip has "white" in the name doesn't mean it is white ..... After about 5 "whites" , the rest are light gray light biege light cream light pink light green , etc etc etc ..... Light Gray is simply NOT "white" , and yes I know there are different "whites" but once you vary quite a bit , it's not white anymore , don't care what the paint chip name says .....
Yes exactly 💯 I have been thinking that same thing and it is true 😂
Some people want a softer white vs a stark white. This allows them to play around with contrasts and undertones. White doesn’t have to look like paper, but can have depth as well.
I completely agree with this. I study colors intuitively for self-expression.
@@GermanyandIllionis LOOK at the chart she provides @0:20 (pause it) ..... LOOK REAL GOOD at that chart and tell me how many samples are "WHITE" ..... I see about 5-10 (tops) out of 200 that I would call "WHITE"
Nothing in the squares, yet they talk like there is. Weird.
Are you serious? The frames were the color that they were talking about it! 🤣🤣
Bless your sweet little heart…you tell ‘em girl! You tell ‘em about those empty squares!