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ToggleCream and Deep Green
This 123-year-old Victorian in San Francisco’s Bernal Heights neighborhood didn’t necessarily need a color wash to make a statement. The homeowners gave it a fresh coat of Benjamin Moore’s Cloud White, which happily contrasts with the front door’s sultry pop of green (Benjamin Moore’s Rainforest Foliage). Gold accents and eccentric decor items (like the vizsla sculpture that designer Eva Bradley found several years ago that resembles their beloved pooch, Cashu) are the cherry on top of an exterior brimming with personality.
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Bubblegum Pink
Lean in hard to the Barbiecore trend by opting for a bubblegum-pink house that refuses to go unnoticed. This all-pink house in France’s famed Grasse region is a masterclass in color commitment. “The idea was to create a monochrome monolith in line with coatings found on the walls of houses in Grasse,” says architect Lucie Niney, who designed the project alongside Thibault Marca, her partner at the firm NeM Architects. “It took us time—many color charts tested in full sun or in pouring rain—to find the right pink, one that stood out but that didn’t create a UFO in the landscape.” While this was a custom color, Backdrop’s Barbie Dreamhouse is pretty an almost perfect match. We’re tickled pink by this vibrant dwelling.
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Gray and Mud Red
For this charming fishing shack-turned-cottage that was the former studio of the late painter William Maynard, less is more. After giving the house a new concrete foundation, the homeowners chose to retain the natural, original color of the cedar shingles, giving it a pop of deep red (like Backdrop’s Self-Portrait) on the door and along the borders. The result is something even a color-aware artist could appreciate.
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Bright Green
While dark green is a traditional color for architectural details, throw out the color playbook and opt for something more loud and proud. A stone’s throw from the dwelling Monet inhabited in Giverny, France, you will find such a tenement. Billowing lush vines border the vibrant green window shutters (in a cheery Backdrop Troop Beverly Hills–style hue) and staircase for added charm. It’s a green daydream!
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Pink and Cobalt Blue
If there’s any group of people who could teach us a thing or two about color-happy houses, it’s the Greeks. This pink house with bright blue accents is just a standard house scheme on the dreamy island of Cephalonia, Greece. Pro tip: Complementary colors used together make for an extra dramatic color pop. Similar paint colors are Farrow & Ball’s Middleton Pink and Backdrop’s Blue Is the Coolest Color.
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Baby Blue
Blues got you down? White columns and powder-blue siding go together like peanut butter and jelly. And it’s just as joy-inducing. The exterior of this Craftsman-style home, awash in something that resembles Farrow & Ball’s Lulworth Blue, will make any house the It house on the block, creating blue-sky energy no matter what season it is.
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Vermilion and Dark Green
Nothing says coastal Europe like a brightly colored home with window shutters to contrast. In Burano Island, near Venice, the homes are known for being cheerful and colorful, and this one is no exception. This complex is painted in a color similar to Copenhagen Roof by Farrow & Ball, with shutters painted in an Irish Green tone much like Rust-Oleum’s Satin Vermont Green hue.
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Pastel Pink
Pretty in pink stands true for this Victorian House in Eureka, California. After receiving the name “Pink Lady,” this home, built in 1889, combines tones of blush pink (like Backdrop’s barely there Modern Love), white, and gray, making it incredibly feminine and remarkable to look at.
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Deep Red
A waterfront building is a statement in and of itself: Douse it in color and you’ve got something of fabled allure. This seaside house in the small Norwegian fishing village of Moskenesøya, standing among the majestic fjords, is proof that a splash of red paint (much like Behr’s Morocco Red) is a standout no matter how imposing your backdrop is.
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Light Yellow
It’s classic for a reason: The clapboard house, with its thatched roof and wrap-around porch, is storybook architecture at its finest. Give it a douse of yellow (like Farrow & Ball’s Daytime Yellow) and a crisp white trim, and it is straight out of a fairy tale. All that is missing on this house, once owned by Doris Dar, is a white picket fence!
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Dark Blue
Bold colors can add a contemporary vibe to historic homes in a fun way. Take, for example, the ultramarine blue trim (like Glidden Premium’s Brilliant Blue) on this shingled Nantucket house, which gives it an edgy vibe without departing too heavily from the spirit of the house.
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Rustic Red
This stunning Carmel Valley, California, home features its own oak trees, gardens, and views of the Santa Lucia Mountains. Previously owned by Doris Day, the exterior of this 8.62 acre property has a red-colored gatehouse—with bright white detailing—that is the very definition of charming. We’re loving Backdrop’s Bada Bing! hue, which has an impressive likeness.
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Mustard Yellow and Vermilion
You had us at palm tree–lined property. This electrifyingly colorful facade, surrounded by lush tropical vegetation, is a livable painting. A tasteful coalescence of mustard yellow and a perky vermillion on this plaster facade, this equatorial retreat is giving us all the summer blues. Try Glidden Premium’s Down to Earth and Backdrop’s Negroni for a similar look.
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Sage Green
This Craftsman-style house is monochromatic magic. With olive-green clapboard (much like Olive by Farrow & Ball), a deeper sage green (similar to Vert de Terre by Farrow & Ball) shingles, and a light green (try Green Ground by Farrow & Ball) trim—it’s proof that there is more than one way to employ this verdant color.
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Neon Purple and Pastel Purple
You might be surprised to learn that this purple-happy townhome is one of many San Francisco houses doused in varying renditions of this electrically violaceous hue. Something about that California sunshine drives people to joyful repose that is thus demonstrated in an unforgettable streetside display. Take a note from the pages of this brazen homeowner and incorporate high-contrast hues of pastel and neon. If you’re looking for neon and bold, try Barbie Dreamhouse Purple and Porsche Ruby Star by Backdrop Home for similar tones.
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Bright Orange
Haven’t you heard? Orange is the new black—and not only in the world of bingeable comedy-dramas. In the French Quarter of New Orleans, this vibrant Creole cottage is rocking a daring mix of a lesser-used color. Lookalike tones include Dutch Orange and Charlotte’s Locks by Farrow & Ball. Talk about embracing a zest for life.
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Cool Gray
This Spanish Mediterranean-style house—that sits on a ruggedly picturesque hilltop abutting the Los Padres National Forest in Montecito, California—stands as a monument to self-sufficiency. The devastating Thomas Fire of 2017 that tore through the property forced a new beginning with hyperfunctional architecture. What does that mean for the exterior? With the help of architecture firm Shubin Donaldson, it was constructed from hard-wearing materials, most notably fire-resistant standing seam metal cladding in a gentle gray tone, much like Dimpse by Farrow & Ball.
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Coral and Tan
For the renovation of this San Antonio house, architect Vicki Yuan says the most dramatic changes resulted from simply ditching the home’s austere white paint job. “I’m an architect who is stereotypically nervous about color,” Yuan qualifies, but she embraced what she calls “makeup tones”—beiges, peaches, and buffs—to give the house a warm, feminine energy. Here in the spa-worthy courtyard, the thick, caliche stone walls are given a dose of what looks very much like Pantone’s 2024 Color of the Year, Peach Fuzz.
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Teal Green
Sandy Beige
The color of this James Turrell–inspired domicile is the last thing you notice. The five-part series of buildings are tied together by 5,000-square-foot sunshade, made of panels of an off-the-shelf aluminum foam product originally developed as an acoustic material. But the power of these sand-colored walls (try Hay by Farrow & Ball) and poured concrete floors lies in their ability to allow the architecture to focus and filter the light emanating from above.
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Sofia Quintero is the Editorial Assistant for ELLE DECOR. She helps out with all aspects of print production and is a frequent contributor to elledecor.com. She graduated from university in Paris, and is originally from Costa Rica.
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