• Nate Cox@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    The wall is almost certainly already some variation of Swiss coffee, which is like a drop of black and two drops of umber per gallon… juuuuust enough to give it a little color.

    When I used to help people pick colors the primary advice I gave them was that once it’s on the wall you will never see the difference between the four shades of [color] you’re looking at because at scale your brain blends it in with the lighting and ambient color of the rest of the room.

    Sheen makes more of a difference, and the answer is always satin/eggshell for living spaces and gloss for kitchens and bathrooms (because it’s more moisture resistant and washable). Flat can go fuck itself, it only exists as a cheap option for track homes who don’t care about your paint looking good for more than six months.

    Source: worked at a paint store for several years, did a loooot of color matching by eye.

    • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      You don’t think flat is good for ceilings?

      (Also I think some people do really care about the difference between the shades but they’re not the ones who need help picking one out.)

      • mihnt@lemmy.ca
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        2 months ago

        Sorry, not who you responded to, but flat is great on ceilings everywhere but a kitchen. There’s always a chance food gets splashed on the ceilings in a kitchen so it’s best to use semi-gloss or better so you can clean it.

        I do semi-gloss in my bathrooms as well to keep moisture out of the walls as much as possible.

        Flat in living areas is best in my opinion though for light refraction. Softer and more light gets refracted all around the room instead of just reflected straight from the light source.