Little Greene is an English paint manufacturer of high quality, highly involved socially and environmentally. From the world of high-end paint, the brand has come naturally to create a range of luxury wallpapers.
Little Greene is an English paint manufacturer of high quality, highly involved socially and environmentally. From the world of high-end paint, the brand has come naturally to create a range of luxury wallpapers.
Each Little Greene wallpaper uses special printing methods used in the manufacture of finest existing wall coverings.
Created in 1773 to Manchester Little Greene Dye Works is one of the oldest manufacturing sites of paintings in England. Located at the confluence of two rivers, the area benefited from the continuous stream of clean water, which made him very popular over the centuries. This resource was used as a valuable ingredient incorporated into the products. The first paintings were made based pigments similar to those used by major artists of the time. Little Greene still employs many of these components. Color depth that is found on wallpaper Little Greene is remarkable.
A soft brownish red acheived by mixing the primary red with the secondary green and favoured for its depth and discretion
Another of the powerful, primary shades that made its way to the English decorative paint market as a direct result of the immigration swell in the 1970s.
A darker and more complex version of Silt (40), arresting schemes are made using colours from this group
A sumptuous red, wonderfully rich and hugely popular for dining rooms and studies
Matched to an example or original Bath Stone and used to paint the facades of Victorian town houses
A very pale traditional canvas colour using just white and umber, ideal as a white for walls and ceilings
On a red ground, reminiscent of gothic style, the original paper was made from cellulose wood pulp and machine-printed.
An enigmatic shade which was originally based on a number of colours found on the tapestries at the royal factory in Beauvais, Picardy
An especially English blue which was frequently used in distemper and on wallpapertraces have been uncovered in the revered Kenwood House,London
This subtle pink tone blends well with dark colors. It appears in any interior without dominating too