DESIGN COURSE PART 4: Using Paint to Colour your House & Garden
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- Опубліковано 11 гру 2021
- Bunny shares her design thoughts on how to make the best use of colour on Hard surfaces in the garden. Whether it be furniture, trellis, walls, windows or doors, there's some golden rules to follow.
Having recently repainted her entire property, she shares her thoughts on how to choose the right colour and discusses the many different paint types. And she seeks advice from Patrick Baty, a paint historian from Papers and Paints.
Bunny eventually chose a Littlegreen Mid Lead 114 colour, made up by www.brewers.co.uk into a Zinsser exterior paint with a 15 year repaint interval guaranteed. An important point as she has no intention of repainting again for a long time.
#designwork #painting #house #garden - Навчання та стиль
Bunny, I love watching and learning from your videos. Thanks so much for sharing a beautiful slice of English life, and all the incredible details of your gorgeous gardens.
I wish more people would choose great colors for their gardens & houses!
Excellent video! ❤
Thank you for these videos - I could watch you all day!!! You’ve such a wealth of experience and knowledge. My dream is to have a garden designed by you 😊
Once again, GREAT VIDEO BUNNY !
Wonderful DESIGN COURSE ! - Impatiently waiting for DESIGN COURSE 5 🎄
Many thanks 🐇
Yes thanx, 🙆♀️this was in my mind for two months, painting my woodenpots...i do,love the old origins paint,made bij 6 colors .. so you brought me on an idea. 🥰Hope I can order paint in the UK. What was first something i found hard🤯 to rap my mind around it is now a joy and a choice made❤️. Thanx for posting. Greetings from the Netherlands.🌷💐
This video was so interesting because you were not dogmatic. You presented a variety of colors and showed how they could be used in different circumstances to best effect. YSL"s garden was bold and vivid and belonged in Morocco, but would look odd in the English countryside. I have a small stone cottage in Austin, Texas, and the peach, yellow, cream, and gray of the stone inform colors for paint and plants. I'm looking forward to my new Lady Hillingdon roses to bloom.
Thank you Bunny. This video is so helpful.
Thanks so much for this... Your fantastic taste and remarkable experience in one! Brilliant.
Loved this episode
I so appreciate you sharing your thought process on choosing a color. There really is A LOT to consider as you so well know and pointed out with your examples. Your videos are always amazing, thank you for taking so much time to make them so well.
Love love LOVE the grey you chose 💗
Really good thanks so much. I'm used to mixing paint colours in artwork, so have always mixed my own colours for interior & exterior use. This allows you to create interesting, complex colours from much cheaper base materials, which works great indoors, but I have to admit I'm jealous of the much longer lasting paint you've found for exterior use, thanks for the recommendations.
Marjorelle, blue is the color for my garden in Ohio. It looks wonderful with yellow campsis flowers.
I love this entire series. Thank you Bunny. I have a shed that I would like to paint/stain. I can't make up my mind faced with a menu! So it's a tough one for me. I'd rather be boring than make a mistake, so I'm in limbo....I'll watch this video again....
I suppose the thing to decide is if you want it to stand out if it’s a good looking shed, or hide it - sometimes we have just planted ivy panels in front to make it merge into the garden. 🐇
Thank you Bunny, that was really interesting, I always enjoy your videos. At least you didn't recommend Red Cedar, which is one of the worst garden colours ever 😝😯 yet somehow seems popular, at least where I live. My neighbour has Red Cedar, and it makes me cringe every time! I've gone for a greyish green and I like the fact that it recedes, so more attention can be given to the plants and flowers.
Interesting 👍
I'm just about to use a dark grey on the fence and shed but it'll cost a fair bit in paint so I've found a masonry paint at £10 for 5litres from BQ. Hope it lasts!!
When I was a child we had a sheep dip that was converted to a swimming pool. Proper swimming pool paints were expensive so my father used emulsion paint. It lasted amazingly well he even painted sharks on the walls, they looked amazing!🐇
I use whatever I can buy from the paint store returned by other customers. It's 75 % off.
I even mix in other cans so the colors are usually kind of muddy.
Suits me fine , I'm not rich.
I am struggling to find a "signature" color for my garden and this vid was very helpful. Your comments about the brilliant Moroccan blue while standing in front of your newly painted gray gate (Excellent choice by the way) and a sky behind you of a very similar shade made me wonder if dominant "sky color" might not be a good starting point when choosing colors.
Rey interesting and helpful
50 Shades of Beige, that's me ~ I like to play it safe! I always feel that the hue of the fabric (stone/brick) of the building should be the main player, with the woodwork being complimentary support cast.
Yes it’s a great colour, I used it on a tropical garden for Chelsea Flower Show one year - a real positive colour and luckily the sun shone that May!🐇
Sorry that comment should have gone to the comment above!
Brilliant video as always! I was really interested in your paint brand suggestions. We’ve done ours with Little Green brand and it barely lasts two years. To get fourteen years out of an exterior paint would be amazing.
Wow that’s disappointing Little Green told me their paint should last six years, I was tempted as the colours are great, but am glad I went for Zinsser. 🐇
Wow that’s disappointing Little Green told me their paint should last six years, I was tempted as the colours are great, but am glad I went for Zinsser. 🐇
Really enjoyed the video. Can you please tell me the name of liquid that you mentioned that gives a powdery texture and turn into lead like colour. Please
She mentions it in the vid she did on using metal in the garden.
It is this idea 'decency' should be attached to wealth -and 'indecency'' to poverty - that forms the core of one strand of skeptical complaint against the modern status-ideal. Why should failure to make money be taken as a sign of an unconditionally flawed human being rather than of a fiasco in one particular area if the far larger, more multifaceted, project of leading a good life?Why should both wealth and poverty be read as the predominant guides to an individual's morals ?
“Do something really different, make your mark, do something with character, that you really like! “
💙💚💛🧡❤️💜🖤🤍🤎