Letaba March is a woven paper...
Limewash is a very traditional finish, used to decorate and protect porous stone and lime-rendered surfaces. Like Distemper, Limewash is a breathable finish making it suitable for old and damp-problematic walls. Unlike paint, limewash penetrates the surface and the colour is built up by applying successive coats.
Limewash is a very traditional finish, used to decorate and protect porous stone and lime-rendered surfaces. Like Distemper, Limewash is a breathable finish making it suitable for old and damp-problematic walls. Unlike paint, limewash penetrates the surface and the colour is built up by applying successive coats.
The darker lead colour provides a more powerful finish and was favoured on woodwork and doors
A variation on Tropez Blue and, being cleaner, was a successful foil to darker true blues.
From its introduction in the mid 50s this has become the iconic off-white paint colour.
The Regency period was known for its delicate pastels and the popular Berlin Blue, another key colour during this era, used Prussian Blue as a pigment from which this reduction is derived.
The reduction of our timeless and ever-popular Celestial Blue into a versatile white.
Taking its name from the meeting of sun and sky on California’s Pacific Route 1 highway, this alluring shade provides an instant azure blue for interiors and lush exterior spaces too.
A colour derived from the 18th century blue ‘Jasperware’, popularised by the innovative industrialist Josiah Wedgwood at his Etrurian pottery in Staffordshire.