Month: February 2023

  • Choosing the Right Paint Type: Three Things You Need to Know

    How do you choose the right paint type to paint the interior of your house? This question is really three questions in one. Question #1 is how to determine what are suitable paint finish options for your painting project? Question #2 is what determines paint quality? Question #3 is what paint finish and paint grade would work best for each of the rooms and features you will be painting.?

    Paint type: How to choose.
    How to Choose the Correct Paint Type

    Paint Focus

    Let’s first focus on paint finish because that topic comes up right away in every conversation about interior painting and there is often confusion about what exactly is meant by the term paint finish. Before you can begin to seriously consider the right interior paint type for your painting needs you will need to become familiar with the various types of paint finishes and how they differ from one another. You also need to know where those different paint finishes are recommended for use in your interior residence.

    Let’s keep in mind as we proceed that our discussion here will only cover Low-VOC or Zero VOC latex water-based paints that are eco-friendly, non-toxic, easy to use, and clean up with water.

    Paint Type – Finish

    Paint finish is the more formal name for paint sheen. Paint sheen is simply this: the amount of light the paint reflects from the painted surface. Paint sheens have graduated levels that start with no sheen and move all the way up to brilliant sheen.

    Here’s a list of paint sheens by name. Use this list as a general rule-of-thumb method to compare and contrast these different paint sheens.

    FLAT features no sheen.  

    MATTE features 15% increased sheen above flat.

    EGGSHELL features 35% increased sheen above flat.

    SATIN 45% increased sheen above flat.

    SEMI-GLOSS 85% increased sheen above flat.

    GLOSS 95% increased sheen above flat.

    Paint Type – Sheen

    Now that you have a working vision of paint sheen values you can more easily understand why certain paint sheens are universally recommended for certain areas and features of your interior residence. Let’s take a quick look at those recommendations.

    WALLS and CEILINGS: Flat, matte, eggshell, and satin.

    BATHROOMS, CLOSETS, KITCHENS, LAUNDRY ROOMS, MUD ROOMS: Eggshell, satin, semi-gloss.

    DOORS, DOOR CASINGS/DOOR JAMBS, BASEBOARDS, SHELVES, CABINETS: Satin, semi-gloss, gloss. Now we move on to the next consideration and that is: what paint quality is best for my paint job? Paint quality will directly affect both paint sheen value and how well the paint lasts over time and how well the paint can be cleaned over time.

    Paint Type – Quality

    Paint companies have general categories for the quality grades of their paints. They are generally categorized as Contractor grade, premium grade, super premium grade, and specialty paints. Let’s take a quick look at what paint is made of so we can understand how one paint can be classified as Contractor grade and another paint classified as super premium grade.

    Here is what basically constitutes paint.

    SOLVENTS: This is the liquid in the paint that evaporates into the air after the paint is applied and begins to dry. What remains on the wall after the evaporation process is a “coherent paint film” of pigment and the binder. Reminder: Since the paint under discussion is latex water-based paint, the liquid that evaporates into the air after the paint is applied and begins to dry is water.

    PIGMENTS: Simply defined, this is what gives paint color.

    BINDERS:  Simply defined, this is the latex that adheres to the wall and what we think of as paint.  ADDITIVES: These are ingredients added to the paint to affect a paint’s capacity. This could result in a thicker paint or a paint with a mildewcide to help mitigate mildew formation.

    Paint Type: What's in your paint can matters.
    Paint Type: What’s in your paint can matters.

    Paint grades are thus generally defined by the quality and the quantity of pigments, binders, and additives. The better the paint, the reasoning goes, better are the quality of ingredients and greater the quantity of those ingredients in that paint. The better the ingredients and greater the quantity of those ingredients, the reasoning goes, the better the paint will perform and the longer the paint will last.

    BIG TIP Super Premium paints will have a uniquely smooth and sensuous feel to the touch because of the quantity and quality of the binders and the pigments as discussed above. Super Premium paints are also shown to provide a richer, more vibrant look to colors. Premium and Super Premium paints such as Sherwin Williams Duration and Emerald are both promoted as being washable including Duration and Emerald in flat sheen.

    Paint Selection That’s Right for You

    You may be thinking that paint selection comes down to cost versus quality. Here I can offer some encouraging examples that illustrate how different grades of paint, including affordable Contractor grade paint, have each performed exceptionally well for the jobs they were tasked.

    Flat paint on walls.
    Flat paint on Great Room walls

    The builder painted these walls using Sherwin Williams Pro Mar 200 paint in flat sheen, and the walls are well presented. When we were contracted to handle some interior drywall repairs in the Great Room, we used the Pro Mar 200 to match all the existing interior wall paint for a seamless look. The Pro Mar 200 flat performed very well and is a contractor grade paint. The Sherwin Williams Pro Mar 400 Contractor grade paint in flat sheen has also performed well on previous projects where a flat finish was specified.

    Doors and baseboards semi-gloss paint
    Semi-gloss sheen for doors and baseboards.

    The doors and baseboards were painted using Behr Paint and Primer in semi-gloss sheen. The Behr paint was used by the builder, so we used it as well for the interior woodwork painting to achieve a seamless look. The Behr Paint and Primer is considered a top-end Contractor grade and for a semi-gloss it is affordably priced.

    Satin sheen interior walls.
    Dramatic eye-catching colors that were well- balanced together.

    The Client selected dramatic eye-catching colors that were well- balanced together but also striking individually. TSP painted these walls using Sherwin Williams Super Paint in satin sheen. The satin sheen really brought out the energy of the colors and the Super Paint provided a rich canvas and well-tailored look to the walls. Super Paint is a premium grade that offers great results time after time.

    Cabinet Paint Finishes and Sheens

    Cabinets, cabinets, cabinets! These cabinets were refinished using Sherwin Williams Emerald Urethane Trim Enamel in semi-gloss sheen. Emerald Urethane is a super-premium paint and remarkable in quality and beauty of finish. The Emerald is steeply priced but for my money it’s worth every dime. The doors and woodwork were painted using Sherwin Williams Duration in semi-gloss sheen. Duration is a premium grade paint that has produced superlative results job after job.

    Cabinet Repaint Sherwin Williams Emerald Urethane Trim Enamel.
    Beautiful White Kitchen Cabinets

    Where to Find Interior House Paint

    This might surprise you but in the Denver Front Range area interior paints are offered by numerous paint retailers including Sherwin Williams, Benjamin Moore, Behr, Glidden, PPG, Old Western, Lowe’s, and there are also various paint companies online that will ship orders. I encourage every Client to discuss all your paint questions with me and to please do so with complete confidence and a sense of adventure. TSP would love to chat with lour Colorado neighbors about paint grades and paint sheens. Feel free to call Ray (303) 909-3349 anytime with any questions or e-mail us your questions using a web inquiry form.

    ***All photos are actual completed jobs, and are the property of TSP Painting Services LLC.

  • Easy Tips for Selecting Interior Colors for Your Home

    Interior Painting
    Interior Panting

    Selecting interior colors for your home can be intimidating? I’ve noticed something again and again over the years during color consultations with Clients. People are much better at choosing wonderful colors than they give themselves credit for. The main reason people lack confidence and have trouble selecting colors for their interior residence is not lack of color sense but finding the time to make interior color selections a thoughtful and rewarding endeavor.

    Reviewing colors shouldn’t be thought of as a chore with a deadline. Selecting colors should be fun and rewarding. Here’s a few guidelines to make this selection process more an adventure than a duty. If you can put in a little time, you’ve got this.

    What Do I Want for My Interior Colors?

    Maybe with a Mocha or your favorite adult-beverage, get comfortable and have a conversation with yourself. Look around the interior of your house and ask yourself this: “What do I like about my house and what makes it special to me?” Check off those things you see that you like and take note of what those things are.

    Now, notice how everything in your house is a function of the architecture. The placement of the windows, the height of the ceilings, the contours of open space. Then you notice lesser architectural features such as doors, baseboards, a fireplace, cabinets. But what frames the rooms and the furnishings within those rooms? That’s right, the walls. Now it’s time to consider how color can be selected and utilized to define, accentuate, and personalize the interior of your home.

    The Three F’s to Consider When Selecting Interior Colors

    Now that you’ve considered the architecture of your interior residence let’s look at the Three F’s. Flooring, fabrics, and furnishings are the central architectural accessories in your home. Dramatic walnut flooring, a hand-knotted Persian rug, or Berber/Loop carpet all create visual focal points. Pleated drapes, leather sofa, woven wall tapestry all produce sensual impressions. Heirloom China cabinet, paintings, large tropical plants all create personal statements.

    How should flooring, fabrics, and furnishings be presented within the frame of the room? This is where color really comes into play. Thoughtful color selections can bring the flooring, fabrics, and furnishings into foreground focus, the middle-ground focus, or the background focus. It’s your choice and color is here to help.

    Foreground, Middle-Ground, Background

    Where colors appear on your walls makes a big difference in the aesthetics of the room. Careful consideration of the foreground, middle-ground and background colors can make all the difference when bringing a dull room to life.

    Background Interior Colors

    Let’s begin by considering background colors. A good background color has a passive presence thereby putting the active visual focus on the flooring, fabrics, and furnishings. An additional benefit of a background color is that color’s ability to impart clean lines and a well-tailored look to the interior’s architectural shape. Interior wall and ceiling lines will appear clean and light, shadows in corner and lower areas will appear softer, and the interior will feel airy and open. The perfect milieu for your flooring, fabrics, and furnishings to take center stage.

    Two colors from Sherwin Williams that Clients have had great success with as background colors are Shoji White SW 7042 and White Heron SW 7627. Sherwin Williams White Colors

    Middle Ground Interior Colors

    Middle-ground colors accessorize seamlessly with the flooring, fabrics, and furnishings. It is no different than accessorizing an outfit. I was working with a Client and a Designer, and everyone was stumped about a color for the Great Room: this was an expansive room with dark wood flooring, patterned drapes, and furniture all with the same dark blue fabric.

    The colors under consideration just didn’t suit the room because the colors were either too strong and forward or too pale and recessed. I suggested to the Designer that Benjamin Moore’s color Sail Cloth OC-142 might be worth considering. Sail Cloth was unanimously applauded as the pitch perfect color and the Designer remarked to me that it was exactly the middle tone color that was needed.

    Middle tone color was the Designer’s phrase for middle-ground color. Sail Cloth beautifully balanced the flooring, fabrics, and furnishings, created a beautiful complementary canvas of the walls, and the room had a very elegant but hospitable vibe.

    Foreground Interior Colors

    I’ll be honest and say this right now: foreground colors are often seen in commercial spaces. With that said, I have seen Clients’ use foreground colors to dramatic effect. In one specific case, the Clients had blonde wood flooring, two couches with off white linen fabric, stereo speakers in the corners, and a floor-to-ceiling vinyl record shelf. The walls were painted in SW 9149 Inky Blue. The Inky Blue acted as a foreground color giving bold energy to the architecture and the vinyl record shelf seemed to be an interactive part of the architecture. Very cool. Foreground colors have proven that they go very well with the Minimalist aesthetic.

    LET THER BE LIGHT

    One thing to consider during your color type and color selection is lighting. Lighting will have dramatic effect on the colors in your interior home. The most common source of interior light is sunlight, and sunlight shows off all color types and sheens in a very favorable light. (Sorry, I couldn’t resist). There are many types of interior lighting all with varying illuminative capacity.

    Interior lighting has three broad categories: Overhead Lighting, General Lighting, and Task Lighting. These three categories of interior lighting are achieved by specific lighting sources. Overhead lighting can be ceiling-affixed fixtures, recessed fixtures, track lighting, pendant lighting/chandelier lighting. General lighting can be wall sconces, floor lamps, and table lamps. Task lighting can be reading lamps, floor lamps, or wall socket lights.

    No matter what type of light fixture you have and no matter where that light fixture is located the most important thing is what type of light bulb is in those light fixtures. The most common types of light bulbs are LED (Light Emitting Diode), CFL (compact fluorescent lamp), fluorescent, candescent, and halogen. Each type of light bulb produces a different type of light that will affect the appearance of the paint colors on your walls.

    INTERIOR COLOR SAMPLES AND COLOR SWATCHES

    When you have narrowed the colors down and have your paint color sample boards or color swatches, hold them up to the walls and woodwork at various times of the day both when you have lights on and when you do not. You’ll begin to see right then how background colors, middle-ground colors, and foreground colors will truly look in different light at different times of the day. This little trick of matching up colors to lighting type and lighting source will greatly help you get a true read on your potential color selections.

    Feel free to call TSP with any questions regarding color selections and particularly anything you have read here. We’d love to hear from you, and we enjoy assisting our Colorado neighbors in the color selection process. You can reach out via our contact form.