Gone are the days of a limited colour choice for exterior painting... Little Greene's Exterior Masonry Paint is available in almost all colours - use it to achieve a long-lasting matt finish on brick, stone or rendered walls.
Gone are the days of a limited colour choice for exterior painting... Little Greene's Exterior Masonry Paint is available in almost all colours - use it to achieve a long-lasting matt finish on brick, stone or rendered walls.
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
This colour, brought with migrants from the West Indies in the early to mid 1960s, was sometimes used as an external colour, and on internal walls, balanced by plain green linoleum floors.