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.
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.
Historically, Air Force Blue is in fact a generic term for a multitude of shades, mixed by individual squadrons. This version is deeper and richer than some; even more so when used on all the walls of a room.
Tempered with black, ‘livid’ blues range from pink to green; this version is a deep, moody yet restful shade, sitting somewhere between blue, green and grey.
A colour derived from the 18th century blue ‘Jasperware’, popularised by the innovative industrialist Josiah Wedgwood at his Etrurian pottery in Staffordshire.
A popular blue pigment used to dye fabrics in medieval times, woad is a plant extract that produces a charming muted-indigo quality. A perfect backdrop to gilded picture frames.
Offering just a hint of colour, this linen-blue shade will intensify considerably when used with a brighter white.
Little Greene’s research on 20th century colours unearthed this gem, originally cited as ‘Bermuda’, though its actual source is distinctly more north-west England!
A sumptuous blend of Royal Blue and Navy Blue, this is a charismatic alternative to dark grey or black in a neutral colour scheme.
The mineral arquerite is an amalgam of silver and mercury, and this warm grey shade will sit very comfortably against similar materials in the home; a natural partner for silver, chrome and steel.
A truly neutral blue, not too green or violet, this stunning centrepiece shade takes its name from the tips of the wings of the Mazarine Blue butterfly.
A bold, signature shade in Regency times, a combination of the newly invented Prussian Blue pigment and a traditional lead-white base gave this beautiful pastel blue its vibrancy and greenish undertone.
A rich exotic yellow which hints at faraway shores; can be used to create a warm welcoming hallway