When you need a total valabilité, resistance to stains and scratches, Farrow & Ball Modern Emulsion is the ideal high-performance alternative to Estate Emulsion.
Use: Interior walls and ceilings
Gloss Level: 7%
Environment: minimal VOC content
Maintenance: washable, stain resistant and wipeable
Drying time: 2 hours
Waiting time between 2 layers:...
When you need a total valabilité, resistance to stains and scratches, Farrow & Ball Modern Emulsion is the ideal high-performance alternative to Estate Emulsion.
Use: Interior walls and ceilings
Gloss Level: 7%
Environment: minimal VOC content
Maintenance: washable, stain resistant and wipeable
Drying time: 2 hours
Waiting time between 2 layers: 4:00
Coverage by potted m2 with 2 layers:
Middleton Pink is the prettiest and most delicate of our pinks, it creates a fresh uncomplicated feel especially when contrasted with All White.
Its seemingly almost blue undertone prevents it from being too sugary and pink.
It certainly grabs your attention when paired with a bright white, but can create charming interiors when contrasted with a soft neutral in shady rooms.
Red Earth, as its name suggests, has a warm earthy feel and should be used in smaller rooms to create the effect of the stronger Terre D'Egypte.
Picture Gallery Red sits between the seemingly blue tones of Eating Room Red and the browner Book Room Red to create the most timeless warm rooms.
Incarnadine is the richest of crimsons, similar to that used by David Hicks at Barons Court in the 1970’s and is unashamedly red and glamorous.
Rectory Red is a blackened and aged version of Blazer and feels much more sophisticated, especially when contrasted with one of the red based neutrals such as Joa’s White.
Eating Room Red feels authentically 19th century due to its deep blackened pigmentation which gives it an instantly aged feel.
Book Room Red, the muddiest of our reds, is particularly suited to smaller rooms where the stronger Eating Room Red can be a little overwhelming.
Charlotte's Locks has a playful name, taking its inspiration from the flame red hair of Farrow & Ball’s Head of Creative, and it also has a playful late 70s look to it.
Blazer is a bright and cheerful vermillion which reads like a cleaner more contemporary version of Rectory Red.