If you have painted your wall(s) magenta then I recommend you go to neutral colours for the rest of the room. White or pearl grey light fabric for your window coverings. A similar grey for the carpeting or other flooring (white is just not practical for a floor). If this is a bedroom, white linens (sheets, pillow cases etc) and a paterned bedspread (duvet cover or quilt) with as close a match to the magenta as possible in the patern. Furniture (desks, dressers, etc) can be either a light wood or if you are ready to paint it, a grey to match (or slightly lighter than your carpet/flooring. The trim work (baseboards, window and door casings and other mouldings) will look great in white.
If you haven't committed to painting the walls magenta yet, you may want to try a "focal wall" Pick one wall, in a bedroom it is usually the wall directly opposite the entry door and/or the wall you have the head of a standard bed (or the long side of a daybed or mates bed) on. Paint this wall magenta and then paint the other three walls something else. If you are not adverse to pink, you can take the colour chip for the magenta and more up the scale for a lighter but related pastel pink. If pink is not an option, try a pastel of one of your other favourite colours. For inspiration, you may want to purchase a duvet cover that has the magenta in the pattern (as suggested above) and pick one of the other colour from it. Neutrals also work well, a pale pearl (cool) grey for the walls, and a medium (cool) grey for the flooring and furniture, white trim and ceiling and if you can find it either a fabric to match your duvet cover or sheer magenta window treatments.
In both cases, touches of black, please note I said touches, will give the room grounding
Light colors reflect and dark colors absorb.
Cream, or soft colours. Powder colours mainly! Nothing too bold or bright, especially not black.
A swatch is just a little sample of something. A color swatch would be a sampling of colors. This could be for paint, wallpaper, fabric, carpet, etc. The purpose of the swatches is so that onee can see the colors in its intended environment. Such as a living room, office, game room, whatever. That is all it is. Good luck.
Because light colors reflect light, as opposed to dark colors that absorb light.
Light gray for a neutral, medium tan for classic, any deep saturated color for contrast, even red, as long as you have pillows and accent colors in other things to carry it along.Make sure you have a room with natural light for the deep colors.
There is no information about any additonal colors that are available with the ventilation Fan. However, if you are looking for an additional colors I would suggest painting to match the colors in your room.
I say a good combination for colors for a room would be like ORANGE AND BLUE for a kid. And for adults I would say BROWN AND BABY BLUE.
look at a color wheel and use colors opposite your color (Yellow). Colors that would go with yellow would be reds, violets, and blues.
it sounds good to me. :)
As long as you pick colors that would complement the room, these curtains would work just fine.
Light colors reflect and dark colors absorb.
You can go off of your other colors in your room. or there is always whether you want your room to be dark or and cozy or if you want your room to be somewhat bright with lighting and confortable.
Some great colors for a living room would be greyish, brown, neutral tones. These colors will depend on what you really like, and how inviting you want it to look.
* The Blue Room * Green Room * red room
This is a bit subjective. What colors would look good to you? You do not want intense colors near the house entrance because that could off put guest from entering your home.
DecoratingIf you mean decorating instead of dacerating then the answer would be any color really. But light colors make rooms look bigger and it is best if you use color themes and not to many colors or it takes away from everything else in the room. It really depends what you want the room to look like for what colors you use.
One could look at the size of the room, the colors of the walls, floor and ceiling, how they relate to the colors of the furniture and their spatial relations. The light will be reflected by all the objects in the room and the six sides a room has (floor, walls, ceiling). Based on this information one can have an intuition about what lighting would be needed.