Estate Eggshell is easy to wipe off and is washable. Its average brightness level makes it the ideal complement to Estate® Emulsion and Modern Emulsion.
Use: interior woodwork and metal including radiators
Gloss level: 20%
Environmental: Low VOC
Maintenance: Completely washable
Drying time: Touch dry in 1 hour. Dark colors may take longer to dry...
Estate Eggshell is easy to wipe off and is washable. Its average brightness level makes it the ideal complement to Estate® Emulsion and Modern Emulsion.
Use: interior woodwork and metal including radiators
Gloss level: 20%
Environmental: Low VOC
Maintenance: Completely washable
Drying time: Touch dry in 1 hour. Dark colors may take longer to dry
Waiting time between 2 layers: 4 hours minimum under the conditions
Coverage by potted m2 with 2 layers:
Green Ground has a refreshing yet calming feel, so is well suited for use in kitchens to create a happy family atmosphere.
Cooking Apple Green is a Farrow & Ball classic which always feels charmingly familiar and, like all greens, creates the feeling of health and vigour.
Ball Green is a tribute to Richard Ball, the paint pioneer, who along with John Farrow first founded the company in Dorset, England.
Card Room Green is named after the study-like rooms much favoured in the Victorian period and is unapologetic in its masculine feel.
Green Smoke is a shade much used in the late 19th Century and gets its name from the nature of its uncertain smokey green blue colour.
Churlish Green takes its name from the old English definition meaning being related to simple peasant life.
This colour was found in an 18th century Georgian Hamstone farmhouse in Yeabridge, Somerset, when the original gun cupboard was removed.
Calke Green is a cleaned version of a colour originally found in the Breakfast Room at Calke Abbey.
Breakfast Room Green is named after the usually east facing rooms designed for early morning repast, and indeed is particularly beautiful in dawn light.
Arsenic has a lively, stimulating feel to it despite its name being derived from the poison that was once used as a pigment.
Studio Green is the colour used on the exterior of the original studio at Farrow & Ball where many of the very first paints were mixed.
Vert de Terre is a charming play on words, is it named after the copper pigment or our pastural green earth?