The Estate® Emulsion Farrow & Ball can be used on walls and ceilings and has a matte finish and unrivaled depth of color.
Use: Interior walls and ceilings
Gloss Level: 2%
Environment: minimal VOC content
Maintenance: Wipeable
Drying time: Dry 2 hours. Hard the next day
Waiting time between 2 layers: 2:00
Coverage by potted m2 with 2 layers:
The Estate® Emulsion Farrow & Ball can be used on walls and ceilings and has a matte finish and unrivaled depth of color.
Use: Interior walls and ceilings
Gloss Level: 2%
Environment: minimal VOC content
Maintenance: Wipeable
Drying time: Dry 2 hours. Hard the next day
Waiting time between 2 layers: 2:00
Coverage by potted m2 with 2 layers:
Mole's Breath is the most versatile of our stronger accents as it can be used both with the Easy Greys like Purbeck Stone and the Contemporary Neutrals like Elephant's Breath.
Stony Ground is a great alternative to Old White, being less green and more beige.
It creates a stony timeless look, particularly suited to halls when combined with Lime White on woodwork.
It intensifies and does the job of darker Pigeon or Blue Gray, when used in much smaller rooms.
Blue Gray creates the most relaxed of rooms that feel as if they have always been there, due to the mix of its blue, green and black pigments.
Pigeon being a stronger version of Blue Gray is perfect for use in Boot Rooms, Cloakrooms and all paneling, as used in the late 18th century.
Blackened is the coolest of all our whites and is particularly spectacular when used in Full Gloss with stainless steel kitchens.
Dimpse is named after the quaint west-country dialect for the colour of twilight and is one of the cooler neutrals sitting between Pavilion Gray and Blackened.
Pavilion Gray works particularly well as a woodwork colour when contrasted with Blackened or Strong White on walls to create the relaxed, much loved Gustavian look.
French Gray is really much more green than grey. It is perfect for exterior woodwork, a particular favorite for front doors in more matt Exterior Eggshell, or garden furniture where it sits seamlessly amongst greenery.
Hardwick White doesn’t look very white to most people, unless you contrast it with very strong dark colours like Off-Black.