Home Painters Philadelphia PA

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Home Painters. You will find informative articles about Home Painters, including "Five Easy Steps to Choosing Perfect Paint Colors", "Today's Top Paint Colors", and "Color Your World". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Philadelphia, PA that can help answer your questions about Home Painters.


Vandele Paint & Design
267-307-3057
1850 N. Hope Street
Philadelphia, PA
Quintex Cts & Janitorial Company
215-881-3247
866 Scattergood Street
Philadelphia, PA
Howard Renovation And Co. Llc/Spray, Brush & Roll
215-808-1708
7917 Limekiln Pike
Philadelphia, PA
Tj'S Painting & Renovations
(610) 667-4338
211 Grayling Avenue, # 2
Narberth, PA
Craftbuilt Construction Inc.
215-659-0820
523 Quigley Avenue
Willow Grove, PA
Harold And Wayne'S Painting
843-397-1634
1345 N 26Th Street
Philadelphia, PA
Non Profit Builders
267-804-8613
6338 Anderson St
Phila, PA
Multi Color Home Improvement
215-613-7690
6940 State Rd. Unit D
Philadelphia, PA
Martin Difrancesco Painting & House
215-885-9395
1235 Cumberland Rd.
Abington, PA
General Painting Of Pennsylvania Inc
610-783-0808
757 Gulph Road
Wayne, PA
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Color Your World

Color Your World

With Expert: Dewey Sadka
President, Dewey Color System® and Color Marketing Group Chairholder, he holds patents on color systems for both consumers and industry centered on the language of colors. Sadka has been featured in more than 40 national magazines.

Q. We have a 4-year old house with white walls throughout. We want to paint it so it will have some charm inside our house; I want simple colors that will fit my taste.

A. So you want charming use of colors! I don't know your taste, but the word "simple" implies pure colors -- versus rich colors, and your word "charm" gives me the sense you might like pastels.

So pick your favorite pastel colors from the following: sky blue, mint green, pale yellow, lavendar, pale pink, salmon, peach, periwinkle and spring green (a pastel shade of lime green). Since these colors are from the same family you can choose as many as you wish to make your own palette. The only rule is to make sure you like them!

Now assign one of your palette colors to a room -- by matching it to the furniture in that room -- or just because you like that color in the room. You'll find this blend of colors will flow from one room to another -- generating a different mood in each. You will have turned your home into a beautiful, spiritual rainbow!

One final thought. To unify all your rooms, paint your molding, window sills and your doors a high gloss white, which will give it crisp contemp...

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Five Easy Steps to Choosing Perfect Paint Colors

By Caroline Barry

Choosing the Right Colors for Your Home and Yourself

 Mixing warm and cool colors is fine too. Notice how the furthest room pops forward and the colors in the first two rooms flow easily from one to the next. From Benjamin Moore.

Mixing warm and cool colors is fine too. Notice how the furthest room pops forward and the colors in the first two rooms flow easily from one to the next. From Benjamin Moore.

“Do-it-yourself” has become “DIY.” Target is democratizing design, women’s magazines break from runways to run issues dedicated solely to interior fashions, and clichés of paint brush wielding, HGTV watching moms have replaced the soap opera viewing, bonbon eating set of the 1980s.

The country is in the throes of a collective lust for design. And while we don’t all want to actually do it ourselves, we do want our homes to reflect ourselves. We want people to walk in and have a sense of who we are and what we’re about. And the easiest way to impart these ideas is the one we seem to have the biggest problem with: color.

But finding and living with colors we really love can be easy and even fun. Aimee Desrosier, a member of The Color Marketing Group Consultants Bureau and a Color Forecaster for California Paints says, “We all coordinate color everyday. It’s almost like makeup––it pays to get a little information and instruction.” Plus, she says, “There are a lot of tools that do it for you and still give you an opportunity for flexibility.”

Step 1: Getting to Know You
The link between our personalities and color preferences is muddy with outside influence. Desrosier says color confusion starts with information overload, and the often paid for mis-recommendations of home design celebrities. Trends get in the way of what we know we like, and trying to fit colors in with existing furniture, cabinetry, floors or woodwork makes it all worse.

Thankfully though, the unlikely merging of technology, psychoanalysis and style helps guide us through a rainbow of possible color disasters. Pittsburgh Paints launched the Voice of Color “Color Sense Game” . “It doesn’t just show consumers what colors work well together,” says Pittsburgh Paints’ Artistic Director Josette Buisson, a Color Marketing Group chairholder. “It creates an individual color identity based on that person’s psychological and behavioral make-up. This provides meaning and inspires confidence in their color decisions.”

Your answers to seven questions determine your personality and related color preferences. Would you rather vacation on a sailboat, a beach, the Grand Canyon? Do you prefer the taste of cakes, blueberries, peppers? How would your friends describe you? Your result shows a series of colors that work together, and reveals the color palettes for other personalities. Look at them all and see how right they were about your favorites. There’s also the Dewey Color System . Choose your favorite and least favorite colors and the...

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Today's Top Paint Colors

By Caroline Barry

The MUST HAVE palettes for modern homes.

Purple will rule the roost in '09. The Flamboyance of Glossy brights.

Purple will rule the roost in '09.

The Flamboyance of Glossy brights.

TOP COLOR PALETTES

Trend watchers see colors ranging from lilac mauve to cool olive, with purple most prevalent, and patterns varying from groovy psychedelic to crisp country. Metallics and neutrals are still in, but soft contemporary is out, and “Love That Pink” is a new banner color.

Michelle Lamb, co-founder and chairman of Marketing Directions, Inc., senior editor of The Trend Curve and contributor to Accessory Merchandising, says today's top palettes represent "a turning point for color" that "makes a bold statement and says, ‘Look at me!’”

Porcelain Pales like this lemon mist.

Porcelain Pales like this lemon mist.

A rich pattern of saturated brights.

A rich pattern of saturated brights.

Mythological Mid-Values. A colorful trip down memory lane

Mythological Mid-Values. A colorful trip down memory lane

Lamb points to six color palettes and notes the returning importance of the color purple.

Porcelain Pales: Even though these are the palest of the forecast, they are still much more saturated than any pastels we’ve seen in five years” said Lamb, adding that one of the most significant pale colors will be lemon mist.

“Lemon mist is influenced deeply by grey and green, so it’s a little bit edgy and a little bit complex at the same time. That’s an unusual combination that’s going to make this color one of the most popular in the forecast.”

Natural Mid-values: These “prove that complex colors are not necessarily sleepy ones,” said Lamb. These colors include washed denim that will have “undertones of red” as well as lilac mauve.

Mythological Mid-values: Lavish and richly saturated colors. “Each one of these looks like it could be an historic version of some centuries old color,” said Lamb.

Tranquil Deeps: The most saturated range of colors in the forecast. “Cool olive leans towards country green,” said Lamb of one of these deep colors. “This is a tone that allows it to partner with navy and crimson red in a nod to retro-80’s combinations that does not necessarily mean that we will repeat 1980s patterns.”

Primary School:
These colors provide “contrasting energy.” One of them, laser lime, has a variety of uses. “Regardless of the hue, the value or the saturation, there are few colors that cannot be paired with this tangy green,” said Lamb. “Think about using it anytime you need to give color a lift.”

Glossy Brights:
"The most flamboyant palette,” said Lamb. “A palette that suggests neons without the extreme intensity.” The pink in this palette, Love That Pink, is “as clear and specific a color as you can get.” Lamb calls it the standard-bearer of the color group.

“There is ple...

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