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Colours for your Period Property

Perfect Palettes for Period Properties

How do you choose colours for your period property? Every age has used colour to adorn interiors.

We know this from illustrations, accounts and old paint layers. Much research has been done into historic colours and there is a wealth of advice now available to recreate period schemes. Until the early C20th these colours were all made with natural, earth and mineral pigments. The discovery of crude oil changed all this as petro-chemicals and colourants were developed. Today modern paints can simulate old colours but they are not able to replicate the appearance of old paints.

If you want all the benefits of period colours we offer the answer!  We can help you find the perfect colour for you period property. No other paint range is completely derived from natural pigment, used by artists for centuries. As there is no plastic in our wall paint it does not form a film on the surface of the wall so is super breathable and perfect for use over lime plaster.

Here are some rules of thumb from Edward, an experienced, architectural historian for decorating in period styles and some personal colour selections to guide you.  If you use our Hand Painted Fan Deck or Hand Painted A5 Colour Box you will find an interesting description of all our paint colours and a reference to the suitability of each colour to each historic period of architecture.

period property

Medieval (15th Century)

Stick to white!  Select a white that is tinted with a small amount of earth pigments or black – if you would like deeper colour in your medieval home, introduce it in the fabrics and textiles you use.

  • Plain White through to Dove – shown on our colour card.  Go down the chart from Plain White to Fine White and then up from Rose Tinted White through to Dove.
  • Use our natural wall emulsion paint which has a matt, wonderfully chalky finish for your walls and ceilings.  It is easy to apply, has excellent coverage but is extremely durable.  As there is no plastic in our paint it does not form a film on the surface of the wall so it is super breathable and perfect for use over lime plaster.
  • Use water-based eggshell on wooden panelling and other wood or ironwork, including radiators.  Natural water based eggshell paints are the highest quality paints for protection and they are easy to apply, dry quickly and uniquely allow historic woodwork to breathe.

White Lead

Fine White

Portland

Tudor (16th Century)

Only very well-to-do Tudor houses would have used coloured paints, often in the form of stencilled or polychrome decoration.  So best to keep to the off-whites here and again bring in richness with fabric and furnishings.  Emulsion can be used to give the effect of limewash and soft distemper as long as the surface is corrrectly prepared.  Exposed timber beams can be painted in with the walls and ceiling, though traditionally they are best left unpainted and well waxed.

  • Plain White through to French Grey – shown on our colour card.  Go down the chart from Plain White to Fine White and then up from Rose Tinted White to French Grey.
  • Use our natural wall emulsion paint which has a matt, wonderfully chalky finish for your walls and ceilings.  It is easy to apply, has excellent coverage but is extremely durable.  As there is no plastic in our paint it does not form a film on the surface of the wall so it is super breathable and perfect for use over lime plaster.
  • Use water-based eggshell on wooden panelling and other wood or ironwork, including radiators.  Natural water based eggshell paints are the highest quality paints for protection and they are easy to apply, dry quickly and uniquely allow historic woodwork to breathe.

Fair White

Milk White

French Grey

Stuart (17th Century)

The age of coloured walls dawns in this period as rooms were finished in panelling and plaster.  Remember that pigments varied in price a great deal and so the vast majority of colouring would have been done with ‘cheap’ pigments – naturally coloured earths and black (from burning oil or wood).  For richer schemes the browns predominate and blue starts to make an appearanve in the richest interiors and paint was often used to imitate the appearance and colouring of different marbles and expensive woods.

  • Plain White through to Lead colour, Garter blue through to Azurite, Lute through to London Brown.
  • Use our natural wall emulsion paint which has a matt, wonderfully chalky finish for your walls and ceilings.  It is easy to apply, has excellent coverage but is extremely durable.  As there is no plastic in our paint it does not form a film on the surface of the wall so it is super breathable and perfect for use over lime plaster.
  • Use water-based eggshell on wooden panelling and other wood or ironwork, including radiators.  Natural water based eggshell paints are the highest quality paints for protection and they are easy to apply, dry quickly and uniquely allow historic woodwork to breath.

Pearl Colour

Ash Grey

Garter Blue

Somerley House, The Picture Gallery, Drab Green

Georgian (18th Century) – George I and II

Panelling remains ubiqutous in the early C18th and would always have been painted in linseed oil paint.  The colours generally relied on what became known as the ‘common colours‘ though richer interiors would often be green.  As timber gave way to plaster, cheaper water-based paints could be used and a wider palette employed.  Panelling was painted one colour floor to ceiling.  As the style changed to plaster walls with timber mouldings, we find the beginning of the use of off-whites to pick out the mouldings.

  • ‘Common colours’: Plain white through to Inferior Grey
  • ‘Fancy colours’: Drab Green, Granite Green, Eau de Nile
  • ‘Timber colours’: Lute through to London Brown, Sang de Boeuf
  • Use our natural wall emulsion paint which has a matt, wonderfully chalky finish for your walls and ceilings.  It is easy to apply, has excellent coverage but is extremely durable.  As there is no plastic in our paint it does not form a film on the surface of the wall so it is super breathable and perfect for use over lime plaster.
  • Use water-based eggshell on wooden panelling and other wood or ironwork, including radiators.  Natural water based eggshell paints are the highest quality paints for protection and they are easy to apply, dry quickly and uniquely allow historic woodwork to breathe.

Spanish White

Drab Green

Lute

Georgian (18th Century) – George III

The Adam brothers turned out to be the poster boys for the late C18th and by dividing up every surface with ornament they introduced the opportunity to use a great range of colours even in one room. As they were used selectively they could be expensive and so a truly polychromatic palette evolves. As you would expect, off-white is still widely used (mainly for raised ornament) but coloured blue and green grounds abound and the concept of colour balance comes to the fore. Adam, Wyatt and others realised that the colours opposite each other on the colour wheel balanced each other and this can be seen as the secret of the harmony they achieved in their colour schemes.

  • Plain white through to French Grey, Wash Stop through to Fine Grey, Inferior Grey through to Verdigris, Pea Green through to Warm Stone, Etruscan Brown through to Lavender
  • Use our natural wall emulsion paint which has a matt, wonderfully chalky finish for your walls and ceilings.  It is easy to apply, has excellent coverage but is extremely durable.  As there is no plastic in our paint it does not form a film on the surface of the wall so it is super breathable and perfect for use over lime plaster.
  • Use water-based eggshell on wooden panelling and other wood or ironwork, including radiators.  Natural water based eggshell paints are the highest quality paints for protection and they are easy to apply, dry quickly and uniquely allow historic woodwork to breathe.

Dove

Fine Grey

Verdigris

Regency (Early 19th Century)

The last George, as regent and then monarch, set fashionable decorating alight – he could not stop and the height of his love of the exotic can be seen in the Brighton Pavilion! This was the era of the specialist house painter and paints were expected to deliver colour as well as the effects of all sorts of rare and costly veneers, marbles and bronze. The mainstream would have adopted the colour palette that came out of this and certain novel colours became fashionable as advances in paint chemistry made them affordable (yellows are the classic example). Rooms were painted more architecturally, as the prevailing sensibility favoured the antique credentials of Grecian rather than Roman culture.

  • Plain White through to Clay, Ash Grey, Lead Colour, Inferior Grey through to Sky Blue, Sea Green through to Cerullian Blue, French Blue, Aquatic through to Verdigris, Invisible Green, Tea Green through to Celadon, Warm Stone through to Ochre, Nicaragua  through to Lilac Pink.
  • Use our natural wall emulsion paint which has a matt, wonderfully chalky finish for your walls and ceilings.  It is easy to apply, has excellent coverage but is extremely durable.  As there is no plastic in our paint it does not form a film on the surface of the wall so it is super breathable and perfect for use over lime plaster.
  • Use water-based eggshell on wooden panelling and other wood or ironwork, including radiators.  Natural water based eggshell paints are the highest quality paints for protection and they are easy to apply, dry quickly and uniquely allow historic woodwork to breathe.

Lead Colour

Aquatic

Ochre

Victorian (19th Century)

What to use:

The classicism that had gripped Britain since the mid C17th gradually wore off in Victoria’s reign as our country’s empire builders realised the potency of promoting our own national styles rather than those of the Mediterranean. The colourpalette developed with it and it is fair to say it lost a little of its gaiety and took on a more solid caste. Paint chemists continued to make a wider range of colours commercially available and our expanding empire introduced a wealth of different exotic styles – each with their own palette. We became readier to use weighty colour everywhere so that even ceilings could be seen as ‘continued walls’ and painted with dark shades.

  • Whiting through to Milk White, Silver White through to Mouse Grey, Slate, Aerial Tint, French Blue through to Aquatic, Light Olive Green, Invisible Green, Tea Green through to Celadon, Brimstone through to Clove, London Brown through to Laylock.
  • Use our natural wall emulsion paint which has a matt, wonderfully chalky finish for your walls and ceilings.  It is easy to apply, has excellent coverage but is extremely durable.  As there is no plastic in our paint it does not form a film on the surface of the wall so it is super breathable and perfect for use over lime plaster.
  • Use water-based eggshell on wooden panelling and other wood or ironwork, including radiators.  Natural water based eggshell paints are the highest quality paints for protection and they are easy to apply, dry quickly and uniquely allow historic woodwork to breathe.

Stone White

Aerial Tint

Pomona

Hallway Entrance in Fine White

Modern (20th Century)

What to use:

What goes around comes around. Victoria died and after a brief period of excess a new reality set in, peppered with world events and economic fluctuation. In a strange way the colours used in decoration reflected this through the decades, moving from the earthy tones of arts and crafts to the paired back brave new world tones of Art Deco and Modernism. In this period (c.1930) we created the first plastics from the by-products of refining crude oil for fuels. This gradually enabled the commercial development of paints by chemical companies rather than traditional paint makers. The availability of colours ballooned to give us the choice we have today, though we have retained our love of off-whites, derived ultimately from our default palette – white with a little cheap (earth) pigment!

  • Plain White through to Dove, Wash Stop through to Lead colour, Aerial Tint through to Ethereal Blue, Pomona through to Ochre, Buff through to Lilac Pink.
  • Use our natural wall emulsion paint which has a matt, wonderfully chalky finish for your walls and ceilings.  It is easy to apply, has excellent coverage but is extremely durable.  As there is no plastic in our paint it does not form a film on the surface of the wall so it is super breathable and perfect for use over lime plaster.
  • Use water-based eggshell on wooden panelling and other wood or ironwork, including radiators.  Natural water based eggshell paints are the highest quality paints for protection and they are easy to apply, dry quickly and uniquely allow historic woodwork to breathe.

Fair White

Ethereal Blue

Lilac Pink

Contemporary

'Cuisse de Nymphe Emue' Kitchen

'Azurite' on the woodwork and 'Wash Stop' on the walls

'Naples Yellow' and 'Spanish White' children's bedroom

Cuisse de Nymphe Emue

Vert de Mer

Malahide

Indigo

  • Advice on Natural Paint
    • FAQs
    • Choosing Paint Colours
      • Try Our Samples
      • How to choose which white?
      • Using Colour and Light
      • Colours for your Period Property
      • The Science of Colour
    • Choosing Eco Paint Finishes
      • Emulsion Paint
      • Emulsion for Lime Plaster
      • Eggshell for Interior Woodwork and Metal
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      • Radiator Paint
      • Eggshell for Exterior Woodwork and Metal
      • Gloss for Exterior Woodwork and Metal
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      • Painting Interior Woodwork and Metal
      • Painting Exterior Woodwork and Metal
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Deep, elegant panelling in our smoky grey blue, 'French Blue' paired perfectly with a floral wallpaper by @svenskttenn and @pookylights. ⁠ ⁠ Designed by interior designer Maria of @guiraodesign, she says 'work in progress! But so delighted with it I had to show you. I do love blue. I miss blue. More bright sky for all of us! More tranquil ponds! This French Blue by @edwardbulmerpaint and one the happiest wallpapers by @svenskttenn does it all.'⁠ ⁠ More bright blue skies indeed @guiraodesign 💙 - similar to our greys, @edward_bulmer has created all our blues with warmth and a deep richness in pigment so none are cold or flat. Cool, calm and carefully curated 🤍 The perfect way to welcome someone into your home is with a lovely space like this! @theaspeke has used our soft neutral 'Lilac Pink' ⁠on the walls which is the perfect shade to give this space life without overwhelming this serene scene. ⁠ ⁠ @theaspeke's beautiful home was recently featured in @houseandgardenuk⁠ if you want to see some more of this stylish home. ⁠ ⁠⁠ Sign up to our newsletter for 10% off your order, terms and conditions apply - hurry this is your last chance as offer ends 30th June 🎨⁠ ⁠ 📸@michaelsinclair ⁠ So nice we had to post it twice! This time with a sweet pair making this space even more picture perfect 🐾⁠ ⁠ We love this hall space painted in our 'Cinnamon'⁠ with interior design by @olivine_design. These warm walls are a sublime backdrop for colourful artwork and the use of natural fibres and foliage. ⁠ ⁠ Sign up to our newsletter to receive some serious hallway inspiration this weekend AND receive 10% off your order, hurry as this offer ends 30th June!⁠ 🎨⁠ 📸⁠@simonbrownphotography Grey is a paint colour which will never go out of fashion - they are far too useful. One rule, avoid them being over blue or black and they will always accommodate other colours and furnishings. @edward_bulmer has packed our greys full of natural pigment which prevents them from being flat or cold and you will find an unrivalled richness that can be paired with any colour on the chart. ⁠ ⁠ 'Paris Grey' on the walls and in all its grandeur at the magnificent @keythorpe_hall, an exclusive use English country house with a superb gastronomic experience based in Leicestershire. With 'Whiting' as the woodwork and ceiling colour - our universal, 'go-to' white. ⁠ ⁠ To read more, take a look at our stories with @inigo.house Almanac covering this beautiful private house with owners Barbara and Giles restoring it to life (and the stunning 2 acre walled garden!)⁠ ⁠ Sign up to our inspiration - link in bio, more on hallway ideas coming up this weekend... keep your eyes peeled! 👀⁠ ⁠ 📸by @simphotographyuk ⁠A wonderfully colourful and enchanting kitchen at @fionamckenziejohnston Victorian home in East Sussex @victorianwreckbythesea with our 'Drab Green' on the walls and cabinets.... spot the pink concrete countertops too! ⁠ ⁠ ⁠We particularly adore the decorative plates @fionamckenziejohnston found at a local auction, by @janechurchillinteriors. ⁠ ⁠ Traditional, classic and simply effortless.⁠ ⁠Is there a room in the picturesque Norfolk home of @carlosgarciainteriors we cannot imagine ourselves in? ⁠As ever, coveting every detail and superior layering of colour and pattern.⁠ This heavenly snug recently re-painted in our 'Milk White' which @edward_bulmer describes as 'perhaps not the bluest white that milk can sometimes be, but this shade has a lovely warm ‘maternal’ feel so hence the name!'⁠ ⁠Choosing the right off-white can be daunting so do see our website for advice on whites or email us for more help.

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To use this simple tool please add together the total wall lengths, so the parameter of the room which is the width measurement, then just one height measurement. This amount is based on coverage in 2 coats.

As a rough guide, 1 L of eggshell will cover 2-3 doors (both sides) and 1 L of eggshell will cover 20 metres of skirting board in min. 2 coats.

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