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Palette & Paints: India-Inspired Paint Colors

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Palette & Paints: India-Inspired Paint Colors

April 3, 2014

When we think of India, we think of color. We imagine the nearly-neon pigments of the springtime festival Holi, and remember Diana Vreeland’s declaration that “pink is the navy blue of India.” (For more on that, read Michelle’s Domestic Dispatches.)

But perhaps most of all, we think of India’s earthy hues: still bright, but muted enough to be infinitely usable in India and beyond. We noticed that several shades in our recent post on Metallic Wall Paints would flatter these colors beautifully (Warm Silver and English Brown especially).

All the paints are available in exterior formulas, perfect for putting these bright hues to use on front doors or shutters. (Modern Masters does not have an exterior formula, but offers a Protective Topcoat that allows the metallic paint to be used outdoors.)

Photographs by Meredith Swinehart

Above: Top row, left to right: Farrow & Ball Incarnadine; Farrow & Ball India Yellow; Farrow & Ball Brinjal; and Ralph Lauren Baltic Blue. Bottom row: Valspar Swiftly Green; Valspar Perfect Storm; Valspar La Fonda Ortiz Gold; and Valspar Bear Claw.

Above: Farrow & Ball’s Incarnadine is, if you ask us, the perfect earthy red. (The paint maker notes that this crimson is similar to one used by famed designer David Hicks in the 1970s.)

Above: Farrow & Ball’s India Yellow has a colorful past–the pigment on which it is based was first available in England in the 18th century, and made by reducing the bright yellow urine of cows fed on a special diet of mango leaves.

Above: Farrow & Ball’s Brinjal takes its name from a South Asian word for eggplant.

Above: Ralph Lauren’s Baltic Blue reminds us of the bright shades of blue saris. 

Above: Valspar Swiftly Green is the brightest of the earthy yellow hues we’ve chosen here. (Achieve a similar shade yourself by making fabric dye from turmeric in DIY: Natural Turmeric-Dyed Tablecloth.)

Above: Valspar’s Perfect Storm is a match for the dark teal we’ve admired on many an Indian embroidery. 

Above: Valspar’s La Fonda Ortiz Gold may have a Spanish name, but it’s a close approximation of the earthy gold hue of Farrow & Ball’s India Yellow shown above. (La Fonda Ortiz is slightly redder.) 

Above: The dark red earth of India is evoked in Valspar’s Bear Claw

For more paint shades, see all of our Palette & Paints posts, including the Best Black Exterior Paints and Best White Exterior Paints. For more musings on color, see Domestic Dispatches: Pink is the Navy Blue of India on Remodelista.

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