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How To: Turn Your Summer Photos Into A Color Palette

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Have you ever walked into a room that reminded you of somewhere you had already been? Maybe the colors are the same as the hotel you stayed at on your honeymoon, or the room is so bright and airy that it brings back thoughts of your trip to Belize a few summers ago. Click through the jump to see how to design your home around your favorite photographs to make any room in your home memorable.

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It's no mystery that certain colors evoke different emotions from people. Red rooms are said to bring out the fire and the passion (meow!), while grey rooms are there to calm us and yellow makes us want to give the whole world a hug. (awww)

Taking the time to couple that color theory with your favorite family photos can be a great combination.

Most the time when we travel, (unless you fall into the extremely lucky group) we are only able to visit that location once or twice in our lifetimes. We then spend the rest of our days gazing longingly at the photo snapped of the great memories we made.
Do you want to be wrapped up in that Hawaiian sunset again, or feel the strength of those mountains in Alaska and maybe feel the waves of Barbados that keep calling you from afar? Here's how...



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Sit down with a collection of photographs from your trips, or the best summer parties or adventures. Pull ones aside that make you really miss the place or time the photo was taken. Was it the way the sun warmed the side of your Grandparents barn as it fell lower in the sky? Or the way the grass gleamed with dew on it, first thing in the morning? These will be what will make you feel most comfortable in your finished space.

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If you aren't lucky enough to have a home copy of Photoshop on your computer, you can click over to Adobe's Photoshop Express and use their (Free) services online.
You will want to take your digital file from your camera/computer and open it up in your program of choice. Next open a blank document to serve as the location for your new color palette.


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Using the color selector tool pick up colors that catch your eye first. Select the color you like, and switch over to your new document and paint a patch of color. Be sure to look in shadows for accent colors that accompany your main colors.


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Once you have all of your colors chosen you can either print out your colors or send your image to the local drugstore's photolab to have a "photo" of your color palette printed off. Sometimes this method can be more true when you are trying to match colors and doesn't cost you usually more than a quarter.

By keeping your photo with you, be it in your purse or glove box, you will have it on hand for your next shopping adventure. Keep an eye out for textures and colors that would dress a room to reflect the feeling of your last family picnic, where your son fell asleep in the arms of his grandmother on the front porch. What can be more comforting than that?

Be featured on AT and send us pictures of the rooms you design from your photographs!

Photos above via Flickr by: spencer k. s., chadly7, G E L, and ZachT

Tags

How To..., inspiration, green, yellow, dog, white, blue, red, black, pink, barn, orange, photographs, summer, sprinkler, beach, lake, tan

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Comments (6)

Color Palette. Palette.

posted by JV on 2008-07-10 15:11:10
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Palate
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Latin palatum
Date: 14th century
1: the roof of the mouth separating the mouth from the nasal cavity

posted by Lori on 2008-07-10 15:18:20
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Or you can go to this website:

http://bighugelabs.com/flickr/colors.php

Upload a photo and get a color palette produced instantly. No expensive Adobe products required (though I do love Photoshop).

posted by crazy_betty on 2008-07-10 15:41:07
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We have a color sampler over at hexday.com. You have to be a signed up user and it currently works off a bookmarklet, but it's a super simple way to get algorithmically generated palettes. I make that distinction, because as you mention in the post, color palettes are such a personal thing and often colors that people would pick for a palette aren't nesecarily the most common or dominant colors, they are often colors that have the greatest contrast against other colors. A good example being the life guard chair, the yellow is proportionally small, yet would probably appear on many peoples palette if they manually picked it.

For fun I ran the above images through the hexsampler.

http://hexday.com/sampler/view/48766fa6a62a2
http://hexday.com/sampler/view/48766fc209e92
http://hexday.com/sampler/view/48766fc992a9d

They're not far off, but they might be skewed by the inclusion of the manual palettes across the bottom.

Anyway, I hope you like the site, checkout the blog as well for more posts that are very much like this one.

posted by JPsykes on 2008-07-10 16:30:44
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Oh and I forgot that this site is better...

http://www.colourlovers.com/palettes/add

posted by crazy_betty on 2008-07-10 16:39:47
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Wow, to me the funny thing is I just did this last night. I'm moving and have a turning leaf ad i pulled from a magazine a while ago. I want to base my bedroom on it and wanted to see the exact colors of the ad.

posted by enlovei7 on 2008-07-11 06:34:53
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