Painting the floor is an easy yet dramatic way to change the feel of a room, and with most of the Little Greene colour range at your fingertips you can be as bold or a subtle as you like.
Floor Paint has an attractive and extremely tough mid sheen finish and uses our eco-oil recipe, which has been formulated using naturally occurring vegetable ...
Painting the floor is an easy yet dramatic way to change the feel of a room, and with most of the Little Greene colour range at your fingertips you can be as bold or a subtle as you like.
Floor Paint has an attractive and extremely tough mid sheen finish and uses our eco-oil recipe, which has been formulated using naturally occurring vegetable oils.
It is believed that Frederick Handel and Benjamin Franklin had their London front doors painted in this rich, almost edible shade
David Hicks, one of the most important designers of the 60s and 70s, used powerful colours in combination to dramatic effect. Besides domestic projects for English aristocracy, Hicks also worked on many commercial projects and used this blue in the restaurant at the top of the London Telecom Tower in 1962.
Made popular by the landscape gardener Humphry Repton who recommended it for fencing and railings so that they would blend better with the background vegetation
A classic off-black colour, Obsidian Green has since been a popular colour for front doors and exterior railings, but in the 1970s it provided a dramatic backdrop to natural wood furnishings and khaki.
From its introduction in the mid 50s this has become the iconic off-white paint colour.
With its deep indigo hue, Dock Blue is a generous and indulgent colour: a little warmer than its greener sister shade, Royal Navy.
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 origins of smalt as a pigment – the encapsulation of cobalt into glass – date from as far back as 200BC. This technique resurfaced and rose to the height of popularity in the 18th century.
The reduction of our timeless and ever-popular Celestial Blue into a versatile white.
The name of this classic 20th century shade was not inspired by a colourful lunar cast, rather the hue of the earth as seen by man, from the moon’s surface in 1969.