* I was asked by
Chika Sunoto Photography, who took our last family photos, to write a blog post about all our color choices and how it came together with my photo gallery wall project. This is what I came up with...
I love color. Color does not scare me.
That is something you should know from the very beginning. There is
not one wall in our home still painted white except the laundry room
(and that drives me nuts). So, if you are a person who starts to
sweat when you think about adding color to your home, this blog might
take you over the top, but I challenge you to think outside your
"safe box" and dare to throw some color into your lives.
The "trick", I think, with
adding color to a home is simply making sure it is the right color
for your area as well as coordinating it with your furniture and
fixings so it does not seem out of place. Color that is well thought
out and planned before the brush even hits the surface is color you
will not regret living with in your day-to-day world.
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Our original dining room--dark, dark, dark. |
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Our original kitchen--also dark! |
When we moved into this home several
years back, the kitchen and dining room area was painted in dark red
and cream colors. Although it looked fine and even matched what I
had in our old kitchen as well as the painting my brother-in-law had
painted for us, a few years into living in it, I knew the space was
needing to be lightened up. The room was feeling dark and closed in
when I wanted it to feel refreshing and open for all who came to eat
around our table. After looking at various colors of kitchens online
and bringing home several color swatches, I settled on switching out
the dark red for a bright lime green color. It seemed the switch in
color was exactly what I was wanting, but it left me wanting a bit
more change than that one color.
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From red to bright green! Now we are getting somewhere. |
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Nothing says re"fresh"ing like a bight green kitchen! |
To make a long story short after the green went on the walls, I bought a
black antique buffet table, which made me want a more antique looking
dining room table and chairs. I found that on Craigslist and
refinished them myself in a robin's egg blue and black to match the
buffet. I recovered the chairs in three different patterned
materials that tied the lime green of the walls and the blue from the
wood together perfectly.
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Nasty table from Craigslist |
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Refinished table to match my black antiqued buffet table. |
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Nasty Craiglist chairs--oh.my.word. |
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Refinished chairs with seat covers to tie in the greens and blues. |
I also repainted the hardware in our
kitchen from gold to brushed nickel, replaced the overhead light in
the dining room, and painted the cream wall gray to offset the new
hardware color. Although I was almost done, there was one more
change I was desperate to complete. Above the black buffet on my
newly painted gray wall was a painting that no longer matched a
single color in my dining room/kitchen area. It just had to go, but
what should I replace it with? I always wanted to have a wall full
of the people I care most about...my family...so this was the perfect
opportunity to do so. The only problem was I didn't have
professional photos that all went together to make it look complete
and planned. This is where Chika from
Chika Sunoto Photography certainly came to my rescue.
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New color (before the back wall went from cream to gray), new table, new buffet table... painting that no longer matches...boo. |
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Just one more thing needs help--that last wall needed painted gray and the painting needs changed out. |
Step number one when heading in for
some professional family photos is finding the clothes to wear for
them. Dressing a family of six in coordinating outfits is a bit more
challenging then when it was just my hubby and me, but by knowing
where these photos were going to be displayed in our home, I was able
to have a color scheme to go with. Many families choose all white
shirts, all black shirts, or very dull, dark colors in order to match
each other. While some of those photos do end up looking good,
others seem washed out, too dark, or lacking originality. I would
encourage you to look around the room where you are going to hang
your photos to see what colors you may want to match your clothes to.
Textures and patterns interspersed with solid colors on clothing
also help to liven up the look of the photo. For our family photos,
I knew the best way to coordinate with the rest of my dining room
would be to include the lime green and robin's egg blue colors in our
clothing. Those bright and bold colors would definitely make our
family photos fun and unique to our space. *A few tips from my
experience: 1) To make sure the colors would match the paint well, I
even took some of the leftover material from my chair covers to the
store with me until I found the best matches for all of us. 2) Shop
thrift stores or second-hand stores for outfits--especially
children's clothes. It can get pretty pricey to buy all new outfits
for six members of the family if you don't have the colored clothing
you want on hand already.
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Blues, greens, and browns...all add "pops" of color for our wall.
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Don't be afraid of several different patterns in your clothing scheme--just separate them out a bit with some solids. |
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My absolute favorite photo EVER of my handsome hubby and myself. |
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Love this crew! |
Once Chika worked her magic with our
family photo session, I was sure there would be at least one of each
child and hopefully one of our family together that would be "good
enough" to make the space over the buffet table work. However,
with the first glimpses of our photos from Chika, I knew I was going
to have a problem. Each and every photo was so beautiful I did not
have a clue how to dwindle it down to just a few photos. I now
wanted to showcase all these wonderful captured moments, but how on
earth would I be able to do it? I started to figure it out by
looking up examples of photo gallery walls to give me ideas of how to
make this work best with the space I had. I counted up the number of
photos I really wanted to hang (seventeen...yikes!) and began to shop
for frames. I headed to Hobby Lobby and quickly realized having
seventeen photos to purchase frames for was going to be impossible on
our budget. What to do, what to do? Instead of spending the money
or changing my plans back to a few basic photos, I headed to several
of my second-hand stores to peruse the frame sections. After a few
stops, I had all seventeen frames for under $20. They were all old,
dirty, various colors and materials, and held "interesting" pieces of
art. At first glace it was a hodge-podge of frames that was nothing
but ugly, but since I had already taken my dining room table and
chairs from ugly to beautiful, I knew what could be done in the end
with these frames with a little bit of time and paint.
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This was the loot of ugly frames I brought home from the second-hand stores with the exception of the two black patterned frames...they were on clearance at Hobby Lobby for cheap! |
To transform the frames into pieces
that would work with our color scheme as well as the antique look in
our dining room, I pulled out the green, blue, black, and brushed
nickel paints as well as my antiquing glaze. After a few hours of
priming and painting work, they were completely updated from drab to
fab and ready for photos. I arranged them on the floor of our
bedroom over and over and over again until I found the look I enjoyed
the most. To transfer the collage from my bedroom floor to the wall,
I simply used the technique of cutting out newspaper to the size of
each frame, taping the newspaper up on the wall in the exact
positions I wanted them, measuring out where the nails would go on
each piece of newspaper, and then hammering in the nails. At that
point, the newspaper could come down and the actual frames could go
up in their place. It was a great way to hang everything without
having to hold big heavy frames while trying to get exact
measurements.
With that, the work was done. Seeing
all the frames up on the wall with Chika's amazing photos inside them
for the first time was breath-taking. The colors were popping out
from everywhere and everything tied so beautifully together with the
rest of our room. It was perfect! When I sit down to eat I find
myself starring at all the preciousness of my family photos and am so
glad I was able to put so many of them up there. When we have guests
over I absolutely love sharing this bright, fun, and meaningful space
with them.
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My finished wall of fabulous photos--thank you, Chika! |
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The complete look of our color-coordinated dining room. I LOVE it!!! |
I hope by seeing these photos and
hearing how it all came together for me, you will be inspired to add
some color into your room, your furniture, your outfits, and even
your lives. Budgets do not have to be high for transformation to
happen. A little bit of planning, some elbow grease, and a vision
for what you want can make a space feel perfect for you without
breaking the bank. I want to thank Chika for working so well with
the needs of my family. She captured each of my children so well and
I have to say I have never had a more perfect photo of my husband and
myself alone before either. I treasure each of these gifts greatly
and am so blessed to have them on my wall for all to see and enjoy.