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9 Colors That Make a Room Look Bigger
Living in a small home? There are a lot of ways to increase the visual appearance of your space, even if you can’t increase your actual square footage. This include a wide variety of colors that make a room look bigger—and feel bigger, too. By making smart choices with your home’s color schemes, you can give the illusion of more space and help make better use of the space that you have, which is a pretty impressive feat for an easy, beginner-friendly DIY that likely won’t take more than a weekend or two to complete.
If you’d like a bigger room but don’t have a full renovation in your budget, we’ve got your back. Here are the nine colors that make a room look bigger, plus some other helpful tips that can help you increase the size of your space when you can’t, you know, actually increase the size of your space.
Even with the best of intentions, choosing the wrong paint color for a small room can make it feel closed in and claustrophobic. In fact, you often don’t understand the full impact of color in your home until you work strategically with your color palette—or accidentally choose a color that gives the opposite effect of what you were looking to achieve.
The best paint colors for small rooms are those that work with both the natural contours of the space and the available natural light to provide a visual transformation that gives the suggestion of there being more space than there really is. And while it’s often thought that light paint colors are the way to go when you want to do this, you’re not quite so limited when it comes to colors that make a room feel bigger. Here are nine that get the job done (and that look oh-so-pretty to boot).
Pale blue
Dark blue
Soft black
Cool gray
Light green
Taupe
Lavender
Blush pink
Crisp white
Other creative ways to make a room look bigger with paint
How you use paint in a room can be just as important as what colors you choose for making a room look and feel bigger than it is. Try these techniques to expand your space and make the best use of your available square footage.
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- Paint an accent wall. Accent walls serve as de facto focal points in a room. They can also lend additional dimension to a space that’s in need of it. You can choose to paint one accent wall, or mix it up by painting two walls in a darker shade and two walls in a lighter shade within the same color family. As a good rule of thumb, keep your accent wall (or accent walls) to the long walls in a room and go lighter with the shorter walls.
- Paint the ceiling. If you want to add the illusion of height to a room, look up. In smaller rooms, painting the ceiling a light color can heighten the overall feel of the space. And it doesn’t have to be a shade of white, either. Turn tradition on its head by using a crisp white on the walls and trim with a pop of color on the ceiling.
- Consider the finish. Light colors have an inherent reflectivity, which is why they can make a room feel bigger. Another way to achieve this—or to boost the already enlarging effects of a light color—is to go with an eggshell, satin, or semi-gloss sheen instead of a matte.
- Don’t pair dark colors with a light trim. This might seem antithetical to everything you’ve learned about painting a room, but stick with us here. Pairing dark colors with white or other light colored trim creates a visual border that chops up the space and keeps it looking small. Dark colored trim, however, doesn’t cause a visual barrier and keeps the eye moving around the room, in turn making it feel larger than it really is.
Some things that you’ll want to keep in mind when picking and choosing what paint colors and techniques will help enlarge your space include what direction your windows face (east and west will provide you with the most natural light, while north and south will have the opposite effect), as well as what other color accents you have in the room. Clutter—whether it’s in the form of actual stuff or too many hues—will close in your space, while opening it up with a monochromatic palette could work in your favor.
Looking for more ways to use creative design to make a room feel bigger? In addition to using colors that make a room look bigger, head here, where we’ve outlined additional tips for how you can use things like your furniture, window treatments, and artwork to amplify your space and make it feel a whole lot larger.