Color Trends

Embrace the Future: Unveiling the Top Home Interior Color Trends of 2024

As we step into the year 2024, the world of home interiors is undergoing a vibrant transformation with exciting color trends that promise to redefine our living spaces. From calming hues that evoke serenity to bold shades that make a statement, the color palette for home interiors in 2024 is diverse and captivating. Let’s explore the top color trends that will shape the way we decorate our homes this year.

Tranquil Teal
Bid farewell to the cool grays of the past, as 2024 welcomes the soothing embrace of tranquil teal. This versatile color effortlessly combines the calming properties of blue with the rejuvenating touch of green. Whether adorning your bedroom walls or accentuating your living room furniture, tranquil teal creates an atmosphere of serenity and sophistication.

Golden Elegance
Gold takes center stage in 2024, adding a touch of opulence and warmth to home interiors. From metallic gold accents to soft, muted gold tones, this regal hue brings a sense of luxury and elegance. Consider incorporating gold in statement furniture pieces, light fixtures, or even through textured wallpapers to achieve a timeless and sophisticated look.

Earthy Terracotta
Bringing the outdoors inside, earthy terracotta is set to make a strong presence in 2024. This warm and inviting color adds a touch of rustic charm to any space. Whether used in pottery, tiles, or as a wall color, terracotta effortlessly bridges the gap between traditional and contemporary design, creating a cozy and welcoming atmosphere.

Mystical Mauve
Mauve, with its subtle blend of purple and gray undertones, emerges as the go-to color for creating a mystical and dreamy ambiance. Ideal for bedrooms and lounging spaces, mystical mauve encourages relaxation and introspection. Pair it with neutrals or complementary shades like soft pinks and muted blues to achieve a balanced and harmonious look.

Digital Denim
Inspired by the digital age, digital denim makes a bold statement in 2024. This deep and rich blue hue adds a sense of modernity and sophistication to interiors. Consider incorporating digital denim in furniture upholstery, accent walls, or even through statement decor pieces for a contemporary and on-trend vibe.

Sustainable Sage
Reflecting the growing emphasis on sustainability and eco-friendly design, sage green takes the spotlight in 2024. This muted and earthy green hue not only brings a sense of tranquility but also aligns with the desire for more environmentally conscious living. Use sustainable sage in wall colors, upholstery, or even through indoor plants for a refreshing and eco-friendly home environment.

As we embark on a new year, the world of home interiors invites us to explore a diverse and exciting range of colors. From the calming influence of tranquil teal to the opulence of golden elegance, each color trend of 2024 offers a unique opportunity to infuse personality and style into our living spaces. Embrace the future of home design by incorporating these stunning color trends and watch as your home transforms into a haven of beauty and innovation.

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Pantone Color of the Year for 2024 Mostly a Miss

Pantone Color of the Year for 2024 Mostly a Miss

Experts weigh in on the awkward feeling surrounding 2024’s pick
A tradition since it was first introduced in 1999, Pantone’s announcement of the Color of the Year usually evokes a sense of whimsy and excitement. From their wildly over-embroidered company language in their press materials, to the bold graphics the company chooses to illustrate it, their Color-of-the-Year announcement has always been greeted with a fair amount of joy.

More a harbinger of industrial and fashion design trends, Pantone’s Color of the Year does sometimes seemingly predict or at least influence play in interior design schemes. Last year’s super-fun Viva Magenta was the perfect example of this, showing up as pops of color in some rooms, and whole walls and even ceilings in others. (See our article on this vibrant color pick from last year.)

This year, we aren’t so sure that will happen.

The reveal of “Peach Fuzz,” Pantone’s selection for 2024, has left us queasy and confused, and we are not alone. The New York Times recently published an article about the color, and the expert opinions gathered echoed our immediate reaction.

Discomfort with the name (which is redolent of pre-pubescence) as well as the actual tone (evoking a limited 1970s powder foundation palette matching Caucasian skin that decades of social justice work have forced makeup companies to expand, or the even more limited definition of “flesh” by Crayola) was not unique to us:

“When I think of peach fuzz — and Peach Fuzz — I think of preadolescents,” noted one reviewer… “Does the shade remind anyone else of a complexion? Specifically, a light one? That gave me pause, for a moment. I think about how brands like Fenty Beauty have pushed the cosmetics industry to make shade ranges that include people of color, especially those with dark skin. This color, plus the skin connotation of the ‘Peach Fuzz’ name, hews pretty closely to the shades worn by white people that there are no shortage of,” concluded another.

Additional comments addressed the color’s indistinct, rather fuzzy vibe: “A noncommittal shade. Neither pink nor orange;” “so, 2024: a year not for bold decisions, but for communicating a sort of vague pleasantness;” and “maybe a quiet, neither-here-nor-there color with just a hint of cheekiness (peach emoji, anyone?).”

However, dragging ourselves away from obsessing on what feels like a marketing miss by the industry leader, we can foresee that the color itself might in fact show up in interior designs this year.

The trend seems to have started last year as we personally noticed an increase in designers showcasing rooms with warmer neutrals, layering earthy terra cottas and corals with pale-peach-leaning beiges and highlighting with creams.

In its own way, Benjamin Moore seems to be on top of the pro-peach-slash-warm-neutrals trend with one of its palettes for 2024:

And yet, note that the top color BM proclaims for the year is “Blue Nova.”

Followers of our blog and newsletter for years — or fans of Benjamin Moore — know that the paint company always covers its bases with multiple palette options each January (see our color of the year report for 2023, also located on the “Resources” page of our website) — and these are usually tangential or entirely unconnected to Pantone’s prognostications.

For 2024, Sherwin Williams put forward what the company deems “a breezy, blissful blue,” they call “Upward.”

While we love the sentiments they claim it inspires, “brimming with positive energy, creative thinking, and total contentment,” we’re not sure this color is that. It feels a bit gray to us. Not a bad color at all. Certainly a lovely pale, cool blue. But not quite what we would call “a sunny-day shade.”

Still, it is a beautiful blue, and not unlike the tones Dina Bandman’s winning design reflected, in her sunroom/breakfast room en français for the 2023 San Francisco Decorator Showcase house, a vision we helped manifest:

color of the year 2023

Color(s) of the Year 2023

What is the “Color of the Year” and why is it relevant? Is there just one? Under the heading of nothing is as simple as it sounds, there are multiple answers to these questions. Color of the Year, as announced by the Pantone company annually in December, is a relatively new phenomenon that began not that long ago, in 2000.

Pantone’s annual announcement doesn’t just relate to house painting, but rather is an analysis of past color trends in industries including fashion, marketing, and business, as well as the mood of the culture, influences in the environment, for products and design, and a prediction (although some would say, this announcement drives rather than foretells the market) of what color will be relevant for the coming year.

This annual event originated as Pantone’s way to generate excitement about color. And the paint companies soon followed suit, announcing their own colors of the year. Basically, it’s all about marketing and P.R. But it’s also A LOT of fun to witness the reveals.

The color for 2023, according to Pantone, is a bright, deep almost-red: Viva Magenta. Read more about this selection in our Color Trends 2023 guide.

At Arana, we like to use the annual announcements as an opportunity to reflect on the jobs in our portfolio where that color has been successful for us in the past. While we have not yet had a homeowner or designer spec Viva Magenta for the walls, Anastasia Faella artfully (and presciently) highlighted this color years ago in her award-winning interior design for a Victorian-era home in San Francisco.

Design innovatrix Noz Nozawa of Noz Design went all out with colors that are close to this shade, if not including it, in her inter-stellar contribution to the 2023 San Francisco Decorator Showcase home, “Reflections on Stardust.” Her movie-room with wet bar and wine cellar sings in a whole universe of bright, rich, deep hues.

Design credit: Noz Design. Photo credit: Christopher Stark. See more images at: nozdesign.com/showcase2023

For a fun comparison, note this image of a cochineal beetle which played a huge part in the visuals for Pantone’s announcement, website, and press materials:

In addition to reporting on Pantone’s announcement, our Color of the Year guide also covers the hues highlighted for 2023 by Benjamin Moore.

Note that the paint company’s color selections tend to have almost no relation to Pantone’s announcement, visually, but instead are more directly relevant to what has been trending in the interior design industry.

In contrast, with a few notable bold exceptions in the design industry, Pantone’s color choice tends to have a clearer bearing on consumer goods and fashion, often including, for example, what colors the iPhone will be available in each year.

Benjamin Moore’s color for 2023, “Raspberry Blush,” is a more approachable coral shade (requiring less bravery than a leap into a whole-magenta-room, perhaps if one selected it for one’s walls).

Our clients have yet to specify it, but this closet in the receiving area of the SFDC 2023 home is in a somewhat related tone:

Snapshot by Julie Feinstein

This lovely closet, in context:

Design credit: AubreyMaxwell. Photo credit: Todd Hido

This closet is part of a spacious three-room receiving area off the front entry, meant to invite guests to freshen up: “And the Hazy Sea: Powder, Bath, and Anteroom” by Robbie McMillan and Marcus Keller of AubreyMaxwell Interior Design and Art Advisory.

While the majority of residential wall color selections generally don’t skew this saturated, Arana has had one client whose choices matched this level of boldness. The homeowner is a glass artist, for whom color is a playground:

Color selection and glazing by homeowner. Painting by Arana. Photo credit: Ren Dodge.

Thus, while Color of the Year is hardly a rule or direct instruction, for our designer colleagues and for our homeowner clients, we see the annual announcement as a point of consideration — to explore the different feelings that the color might evoke, and a source of inspiration, even an opportunity to make changes — as a professional retiring an old stand-by go-to color or as a homeowner considering refreshing a space.

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Choosing Paint Colors Using Feng Shui

Aelita Leto does not recommend that you google Feng Shui and paint colors. In fact, she does not recommend that her clients, or anyone, do anything just “by the book.”

As a Feng Shui master with over 20 years of training, and dual degrees in mathematics and physics, as well as decades of study in Chinese astrology and metaphysics, she takes the accumulated knowledge base of Feng Shui very seriously. And, if there is one piece of advice that she can impart to people about her profession, it is that Feng Shui is not about applying strict rules, or applying the colors on a Bagua (a map used to interpret the energies of a space often represented as a nine-section square grid or octagon) to your walls.

She says, “A great Feng Shui master may not easily tell whether his understanding of the nature of a place comes from intuition or from knowledge. When one has truly mastered an art, intuition and knowledge become one thing, one organ of perception and understanding. Whether we are talking about Feng Shui, or a practitioner in any other discipline, when we consult or apply our expertise or wisdom, we rely not just on knowledge, but we also apply that knowledge based on experience — in addition to what feels right. The true definition of mastery is when practical experience, knowledge, and intuition blend in one.

“It’s like when you go to a doctor. They may check your temperature, blood pressure, posture, breath, age, nature, capacity — just like how l’m looking at the capacity of a space, the neighborhood, the condition of the building, the intention of the owners — and then a doctor or by analogy, a Feng Shui practitioner, will synthesize the available information and taking into account their professional experience, make recommendations.”

Leto relates an example of a client who came to her with an issue regarding paint color. “She reached out to me and said, ‘I had Feng Shui done on my home 20 years ago and it worked.’” The client was currently in the midst of a remodel and felt it was time to examine what else could be done, from a Feng Shui perspective, to improve her home of 40 years. She was particularly stuck on what to do with the living room.

“I work with the land first,” Leto explains. “I begin by understanding the external environment, where the body, where the building stands; Where is the sunlight? Where is the coolness? I look at all of these elements. What is the quietest spot? The loudest spot? You take each piece of information and you start layering them over, and over, and over each other.

“Nothing is about ‘missing corners,’” she laughs, with a bit of an eye roll, “or ‘love and relationship’ in the upper right or ‘finances and prosperity’ in the upper left,” she intones, reeling off a common list of Feng Shui tips and “truisms” that most amateurs discover in their first trip across the internet, or in their first Feng Shui book.

“All of this terminology, it’s a good start for people to have these awarenesses, but that’s not true Feng Shui.”

Instead of being beholden to rules, Leto explains, “There is no right or wrong in what we can create in a space. It’s more about what is appropriate. Is this in alignment with the person who lives in the space, how they want to utilize the space? The living room, bedroom, kitchen, hallways — all have their own energetics. With Feng Shui, when I look at a space, I’m thinking about balancing the energetics.”

“So, on my first day on the site, I’m walking the territory and the first thing I see is this beautiful rock; from a certain angle it looked exactly like a sitting lion. I said to her, ‘Do you see this? You have a spirit rock, your own lion, your own protector!’ In all her years of living there, she’d never noticed this.”

The client had completed her kitchen remodel but was stuck on what to do with her living room. “There was this enormous fireplace, which she hadn’t used in 20 years because it was broken,” Leto recalls. “Because the room was South-facing, the previous consultant had advised the homeowner to paint the walls in gold and yellow. But she admitted to me she never really liked it.”

While gold or yellow might be textbook for a South-facing room, Leto explains that true Feng Shui is about balancing energies, and thus her advice and interpretations can be more complex. A consult with a client will include looking at the person’s Chinese astrology, as well as their age, stage in life, and desires for their home.

She describes her decision-making process for this house: “It’s in the South, it’s a living room, with these enormous windows, so I don’t need the walls to be yellow in order to be ‘representing the south’ — generating warmth is naturally built in because of the light.

“From the moment I saw the room, all I could think of was to remove the fireplace, replace it with double sliding glass doors to the deck, and repaint that living room.” Adding glass doors like this is in contradiction to typical book-Feng-Shui advice regarding the main entry.

Opening up the wall accessed a view of the client’s 10-acre property, a wide, verdant valley in Morgan Hill. “The greenery that comes in, it’s like a green energetic river.”

The homeowner is a grandmother who frequently entertains her family, so, Leto explains, “We want to compliment the activity — it’s not a bedroom, it’s a living room. It’s going to be a focal point, the main connection between the front door and outside to the deck. We need something that contains the energy flow. So the room cannot be white. White would make it too exuberant, too vast.

“If the space is too open, the next intuitive question is, how do you calm it down? If it’s a living room, it’s already going to have high activity, walking, talking, TV… How do we combine that with also wanting to feel settled in and contained? What happens at sunset when the light changes? All of these nuances are going to impact the tone.

“The big view is the yang chi, because of the light, the big windows, the openness, from what point you are looking at the view becomes yin space; it wants to be contained.”

Leto knew that the room color needed to contrast the light coming in as well as balancing the wide-open space.

The color she suggested is a deep, mid-range blue. The homeowner was shocked. “She said, ‘This is one of my favorite colors! I wanted to do that room in that color, but because of the previous Feng Shui person’s recommendation, I didn’t do it!’”

This is Leto’s exact point: “When you start doing Feng Shui consulting, and you understand the light, where the light comes from, the quality of that light, the connection, the type of room and activities you are doing in the space, that dictates the atmosphere you are creating, and how you help the client to choose what changes to make.”

“The living room was painted yellow because all the books say the color in the South is supposed to be yellow, gold, or red.”

Leto’s recommendations included hanging a piece of the client’s art (she’s a painter) on that now-blue wall. The painting, of family gathering together, is a joyful impressionistic melange of reds and yellows, bringing in a touch of warmth and liveliness against the soothing cool tone.

“No book is going to suggest this blue for a Feng Shui practitioner to recommend. No book is going to dictate an accent wall in that color.”

About the “gadgets,” meaning the bells, crystals, coins, wind chimes, mini fountains, etc., she says, “That’s the consumerism. That’s not how we have impact. When we focus on these objects, we can use these things as a catalyst — but are we really doing Feng Shui at that point? I would say no.

“You can do a lot with a color, but what primarily dictates is the body, the energy body, and how it flows based on the arrangement of the space, a physical, tangible, feeling. Knowing how to apply Feng Shui principles comes with practical experience.

“Anybody who googles Feng Shui can read about the theory,” she says, but what she really wants people to know is instead of being beholden to a perceived rule, “Just do what you love! Don’t feel that because of what Feng Shui says, you have to do this.”

Leto sees herself ultimately as a tool, “a divine tool, a channel. My advice is not coming from my subjective mind. It comes objectively from what resonates, from the land, the house, the situation, the people; what creates alignment, bringing heaven chi, earth chi, and human chi into balance.

She notes, “I am not an interior designer; however I am looking at feminine and masculine, the light dance of yin and yang in the space. The saturated blue wall is yin, the painting with red accents becomes yang… It’s like a tango; dancers go with the flow of energy coming in and coming out; you are working with those aspects. That’s the art of Feng Shui in my interpretation.”

Leto smiles as she reflects on this client’s response to their work together. “When I talk to this client now, she says, ‘Isn’t this wonderful? To move into a new home without moving out!’”

For this same client, Leto also recommended opening up a wall in the master bedroom, which gave the client access to her deck, itself already an enormous, positive shift; and the new windows connected her to her spirit rock, the lion, which was right there in her new view.

AELITA LETO is a classically trained Feng Shui practitioner. Since 1989, she has studied and worked with internationally recognized masters in architecture, design, the mantic arts, and Feng Shui. Aelita has built a firm that attracts private clients, public organizations, and businesses seeking advice on how to enhance their spaces, achieve harmony, and enjoy success. She is also a member of the faculty at the Golden Gate Feng Shui School in Oakland. Learn more about her work at aelitaleto.com

JULIE FEINSTEIN ADAMS is a freelance writer who specializes in marketing content development for mission-driven entrepreneurs, home services professionals, artists, and healers. She also writes about her own life as a memoirist and storyteller, and supports others in their transformational journeys as writers and humans with both coaching and editing services. Learn more at jfacommunications.com

Oakland painters Arana Craftsman Painters

What Is Pantone’s Color of the Year?

What is the color of the year and why is it relevant? Is there just one? Under the heading of nothing is as simple as it sounds, there are multiple answers to these questions. Color of the Year, as announced by the Pantone company annually in December, is a relatively new phenomenon that began in the year 2000.

The Pantone announcement doesn’t just relate to house painting, but rather is an analysis of past color trends in industries including fashion, marketing, and business, as well as the mood of the culture, influences in the environment, for products and design, and a prediction (although some would say, this announcement drives the market) of what color will be relevant for the following year.

This annual event originated as a way to generate excitement about color. And the paint companies soon followed suit, announcing their own colors of the year. Basically, it’s all about marketing and P.R. But it’s also A LOT of fun to witness the reveals.

We also want to direct you to herein to projects in our portfolio that are similar to the selections being highlighted by Sherwin Williams and Benjamin Moore this year.

Note that the paint company colors tend to have almost no relation to Pantone’s announcement, visually, but rather are relevant to what has been trending in the design industry, specifically. Pantone’s color choice tends to have a direct bearing on consumer goods and fashion, including what colors the iPhone will be available in, for each year.

We like to use the annual announcements as an opportunity to reflect on the jobs in our portfolio where that color has been successful for us in the past.

Sherwin Williams selected a shade of teal (“Agean Teal”) that is somewhat similar to this very popular kitchen cabinet project, color specification and interior design by LMB Interiors: Hillsborough Kitchen Remodel

And Benjamin Moore’s “Urbane Bronze” is quite close to the colors famed designer John Wheatman selected for the exterior and basement of this august, North Berkeley home: Berkeley Basement Dig-Out

For our designer colleagues and for our homeowner clients, we see the annual announcement as a point of consideration — to explore the different feelings that the color might evoke, and a point of inspiration, an opportunity to make changes — as a professional retiring an old stand-by go-to color, or as a homeowner deciding to refresh a space.

Did you know? Arana puts together a book for interior designers each year about the paint companies’ announcements and the impact, which is available for download on our website in the resources section.

pantone-color-of-the-year-2021-for-fashion

Pantone’s Color(s) of the Year for 2021: Illuminating and Ultimate Gray

For 2021, for only the second time in its 20-year tradition of choosing the color of the year, Pantone selected a duo: gray and yellow. Their explanation is, as always, epic poetry:

“Ultimate Gray + Illuminating, two independent colors that highlight how different elements come together to support one another, best express the mood for Pantone Color of the Year 2021. Practical and rock-solid but at the same time warming and optimistic, the union of Ultimate Gray + Illuminating is one of strength and positivity. It is a story of color that encapsulates deeper feelings of thoughtfulness with the promise of something sunny and friendly.

“A message of happiness supported by fortitude, the combination of Ultimate Gray + Illuminating is aspirational and gives us hope. We need to feel that everything is going to get brighter – this is essential to the human spirit.

“As people look for ways to fortify themselves with energy, clarity, and hope to overcome the continuing uncertainty, spirited and emboldening shades satisfy our quest for vitality. Illuminating is a bright and cheerful yellow sparkling with vivacity, a warming yellow shade imbued with solar power. Ultimate Gray is emblematic of solid and dependable elements which are everlasting and provide a firm foundation. The colors of pebbles on the beach and natural elements whose weathered appearance highlights an ability to stand the test of time, Ultimate Gray quietly assures, encouraging feelings of composure, steadiness and resilience.

“Emboldening the spirit, the pairing of Ultimate Gray + Illuminating highlights our innate need to be seen, to be visible, to be recognized, to have our voices heard. A combination of color whose ties to insight, innovation and intuition, and respect for wisdom, experience, and intelligence inspires regeneration, pressing us forward toward new ways of thinking and concepts.”

From www.pantone.com