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From: [identity profile] gothwalk.livejournal.com


It is that. I'm used to it now, but yeah, it's very very green. Most of the rooms in this house are solid firm colours like that - my study has red walls, and our bedroom is mid-blue.

From: [identity profile] malinaldarose.livejournal.com


Red walls? Well, I suppose. Mine are white, to magnify light and because I always wanted a blue and white room (the rug is blue and the curtains are blue and white check).

When I was a teenager, Mom painted the kitchen. She thought it was going to be a light peach, but it turned out really, really orange. It looked like a pumpkin threw up on the kitchen walls. It was really ghastly.
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From: [identity profile] gothwalk.livejournal.com


The kitchen in the house I was brought up in (0-8) had yellow walls. They were pretty awful, but someone in the family must have liked them, because I remember repainting in the same shade when I was 6.

My father is a fan of orange walls too - usually not screaming orange, but he's sometimes picked colours I wouldn't. He's red-green colour-blind, though, which may have something to do with it.

I like the red... I'll see if I can get a picture of it, although the room is so damn small it's hard to back up enough to get some space for the camera.

From: [identity profile] malinaldarose.livejournal.com


I suppose it depends on whether it's a bright, tomato red or a duller, browner sort of red. I've seen Victorian walls done in a duller red with rich wood and goldeny sorts of accents in the curtains and pillows that looked really nice, but still. Red. That just sort of boggles me.
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