Awolusa: Combine Blue and Gray To Get More Comfortable in Your Living Room (part 2)

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Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Combine Blue and Gray To Get More Comfortable in Your Living Room (part 2)

Ok all readers, home furnishing reference lovers, at awolusa.blogspot.com. Let's continue the article about gray and blue living room. After we discussed some of it in part 1, then in part 2 let's look at the tips : 
Go bare. With deem leafy as this, it might be hard to resist adding in many bare wood accents. A pale wood just like the oak that feature here perfectly complements the dark walls, and fairly dark sofa, adding a satisfying lightness to the mixture.
Speaking of which, a part of the rationale the navy walls and gray sofa don’t visually cancel one another out is that every feature a distinct texture. Do this yourself if you’re pairing colors that risk running into one another. These are wood panels, and mottled fabrics, but you will pair wool with stone or a matte one-patterned wallpaper with shiny furniture, wrapped in foil.
Channel the New England look. Another light and bright thanks to use tones of blue and gray is to tap into classic East Coast beach style. Instead of taking place the super crisp and pretty route often seen with this look, forgo the standard red accents, and let gray and sky blue be the bridges between navy and white.

The gray curtains here are particularly effective for your gray and blue living room. Note how they’re hung. If you’re tempted to travel for a contemporary grommet style instead, bear in mind that this is able to introduce a potentially chilly, solitary chrome feature and a drape that isn’t as soft.
Add warmth. Deep grays have a coziness about them, and a little room or light-starved space can often tend a replacement lease on life by using charcoal shades to stress the snugness.
Certain grays (those with more blue in them) are often in the cool side. (The more yellow within the mix, the hotter a gray are going to be.) So a rug like this one, featuring stripes of blue, pink, and red, adds a large-scale shot of warmth. Now it’s almost lighting that fireplace.

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