Showing posts with label Pantone Institute. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pantone Institute. Show all posts

07 March, 2011

INdulging in Colour!

Recently I have been asked about 'colour' and what it means to me...
I would have to say that I love using colour in varying degrees, values, tints & shades. One of my greatest fears is to not being able to see and to see colour...sometimes you don't realise how fortunate you are.I think, sometimes on Mondays, you need a colourful punch into the week to set it on fire! I love these colourful images here - hopefully it will set the tone for a positive week ahead
Enjoy,

images via pretty stuff, katespadeny, notetosarah, pantone.

16 February, 2011

Baby Pink... The Bonds Baby Search 2011


So I'm continuing with Pantone's Colour of the Year with my little pink entry, of my little Miss Isabelle! I just couldn't help it... a few other friends inspired me to enter our daughter, Isabelle,  into the Bonds Baby Search 2011. Naturally I'm bias [what mother isn't!] and in an effort to support our gorgeous Isabelle's affair with the camera [as you can see from this 'extreme' close up!
Please vote for us when the polls open on 28th February [12PM Australian Eastern Standard time] in the Bonds Baby Search 2011 - HERE on THIS LINK. 
Please feel free to copy & paste this link http://babysearch.bonds.com.au/entry/23353/isabelle-v and email it to your friends who aren't following Palatial Living [and who should be!!]!
 
For those of you who aren't familiar with the Bonds brand - it's an iconic Australian brand that began with humble beginnings and is renown for our comfy cotton singlets 'Chesty' Bonds made more famous by legend tennis player Pat Rafter, and undies, and knickers by ambassador Sarah Murdoch, and the famous 'Wondersuit' an easy wash and put on/ pull off baby onsie - that's an iconic must for all new parents! Not to mention a plethora of other great items in outerwear, more underwear, socks, bedlinen, and a stack of great baby wear. I would be bold enough to say that there would be at least 1 piece of Bonds clothing could be found in almost any Australian's chest of drawers! 
As the saying goes - I suppose you gotta be in it to win it! 
A HUGE Palatial Thank You x
 
 
 
A little history on the Bonds brand...
Bonds was established in 1915 by Mr George Allan Bond, an American who came to Australia in the early twentieth century. He started importing women's hosiery and gloves. In 1917 he began manufacturing hosiery in Redfern, Sydney. From 1918 he moved to Camperdown and began also making underwear. In 1932, Bond built Australia’s first cotton spinning mill at Wentworthville in western Sydney. This particular section of Wentworthville was soon re-named Pendle Hill in honour of Mr. Bond's Scottish family origins. For this purpose and facilitating easy access to Bond's Spinning Mills for employees, a railway station was created. In fact a whole new suburb was created.[1]
The company went into liquidation in 1929 and a public company, Bonds Industries Limited, was established. In 1970 the company merged with Coats Paton Pty Ltd. In 1987 the company was taken over by Pacific Dunlop. In 2001 the company was sold to form a separate entity, ‘Pacific Brands Holdings Pty Ltd’. At that time also the spinning mill was closed. In 2004 Pacific Brands Limited was listed as a public company on the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) and New Zealand Stock Market (NZX).[1]
In 2006, Bonds manufactures 40% of its goods in Australia at three sites in New South Wales: Cessnock, Unanderra and Wentworthville. The factories produce nearly 17 million garments a year and employ 295 full time staff.[2] The company also has relationships with a number of independent manufacturers in China. 
 

Honeysuckle: Shades of Pink....


It was released just over a month ago - the 2011Pantone Colour of the Year - Honeysuckle 18-2120. I think we have really seen a resurgence for the use of pink, Honeysuckle, and tints & shades thereof for little while now almost creeping up on us.... but unlike the signature colour of renown interior designer Dorothy Draper - Pink and most of it's form for the best part and to maintain it's contemporary sophisticated femininity is best used in a couple of different ways -
1] sparingly in accents and highlights only for a elegant paired back look;
or 2] as the only dominant hue [colour] in the space - key is to not allow it to compete with another hue.
or 3] with lashings of the same high chroma value colour  like sunny yellow, tangerine orange, Kelly green etc - bordered by vivid whites and ebony blacks, or graphic stripes.
Whether it has been an unconscious inspiration from all the images I look at and several designer's work that I follow, or that having a little girl now - has more recently 'allowed' me looking at shades of Pink in a different light in all aspects of the usage for the colour. I find myself using it as a great joining colour - much like great joining words, 'whilst', not feeling colour compromised!
Enjoy,


A Color for All Seasons


Courageous. Confident. Vital. A brave new color, for a brave new world. Let the bold spirit of Honeysuckle infuse you, lift you and carry you through the year. It’s a color for every day – with nothing “everyday” about it.
While the 2010 color of the year, PANTONE 15-5519 Turquoise, served as an escape for many, Honeysuckle emboldens us to face everyday troubles with verve and vigor. A dynamic reddish pink, Honeysuckle is encouraging and uplifting. It elevates our psyche beyond escape, instilling the confidence, courage and spirit to meet the exhaustive challenges that have become part of everyday life.
“In times of stress, we need something to lift our spirits. Honeysuckle is a captivating, stimulating color that gets the adrenaline going – perfect to ward off the blues,” explains Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute®. “Honeysuckle derives its positive qualities from a powerful bond to its mother color red, the most physical, viscerally alive hue in the spectrum.”
Eiseman continues, “The intensity of this festive reddish pink allures and engages. In fact, this color, not the sweet fragrance of the flower blossoms for which it was named, is what attracts hummingbirds to nectar. Honeysuckle may also bring a wave of nostalgia for its associated delicious scent reminiscent of the carefree days of spring and summer.”
Honeysuckle is guaranteed to produce a healthy glow when worn by both men and women. It’s a striking, eye-catching hue that works well for day and night in women’s apparel, accessories and cosmetics, and in men’s ties, shirts and sportswear. Add a lively flair to interior spaces with Honeysuckle patterned pillows, bedspreads, small appliances and tabletop accessories. Looking for an inexpensive way to perk up your home? Paint a wall in Honeysuckle for a dynamic burst of energy in the family room, kitchen or hallway.

Honeysuckle products are currently available from a variety of manufacturers:
Wedding Apparel - A flattering hue for wedding attendant apparel and accessories, Honeysuckle is now one of the nearly 200 PANTONE WEDDING Colors available from Dessy, a leading manufacturer of bridesmaid, social-occasion and flower-girl dresses. PANTONE WEDDING exclusively from Dessy provides a collection of color tools to make it easy for brides to achieve perfectly color-coordinated weddings – from inspiration to “I do.” See www.dessy.com for more information.
Paint - Honeysuckle is one of 3,000 colors available in Pantone’s line of superior-quality, eco-friendly paint. PANTONE Paints combine the accuracy of PANTONE Colors with the beauty of high-performance Dutch paints. See www.pantonepaints.com for more information.
Visa Card - Whether you’re buying groceries, paying the dry cleaner or shopping for a pair of new pumps, now you can do it in style with a PANTONE Visa® Platinum Rewards Card in Honeysuckle, the 2011 color of the year. See www.pantone.com/visacard for more information.





Fashion - Honeysuckle always works with the standard basics of black, navy, charcoal or light to mid gray. But using complementary bronze greens like Willow PANTONE 16-0632 and/or Tapenade PANTONE 18-0840 adds a new sophistication to the combination that showcases the energy of Honeysuckle. The green tones can be really interesting in accessories for Honeysuckle tights and top. Another great and unique combination is Honeysuckle with a pinkish brown like Apricot Brandy PANTONE 17-1540. Think of a warm cashmere turtleneck in Apricot Brandy with a matching skirt and shoes to blend and flatter the legs. A Honeysuckle cashmere scarf and belt create a luscious combination. And to blend all the colors, try a big and bold patterned bag with every color mentioned above.
Home Interiors - Honeysuckle is upbeat and dynamic when used on large areas like the entry area of a house or an apartment. It is an appetite and conversation stimulant when used on the dining room walls. In the kitchen, it adds a fun touch on the table in placemats and other linens (patterned or solid), colored glassware, candles and small appliances. Honeysuckle is a great color to cover up shabby kitchen cabinets, or, if that’s too much of a color statement for you, try repainting knobs and drawer pulls. But be warned – once you try this arresting shade, it can become addictive.
Packaging -Honeysuckle is an excellent packaging color for products that speak to something active or festive, or are suggestive of sweet tastes and scents. It’s an especially good shade for delicious food or drink packaging. The name Honeysuckle is evocative of these perceptions. The closest match to Honeysuckle PANTONE 18-2120 TPX in the PANTONE PLUS SERIES is 205 U, p. 45 (choose uncoated – coated is much more vibrant). One of the best combinations for Honeysuckle in the PLUS SERIES in the context of deliciousness is a grape shade 2573, p.76. Grape should be used in lesser amounts than Honeysuckle with the smallest component in a rich chocolate shade like 483, p.32




images via elle decor, pantone institute, coastal living, house & home, verandah house blog

03 November, 2010

How Well Do You See Colour?



This is a great little exercise from the Master Wizards of Colour - Pantone & 'X-Rite Photo....How well do you see color? Take this online Color IQ Test and see. Click HERE to find out . It's a fun and simple on-line color IQ test and learn how you see color. You’ll get more accurate results if you have a calibrated and profiled monitor. What's your colour score? Don't rush it! I think you might just surprise yourself...




images via X-Rite Photo, Cool Hunting & The Tofo Factory, and Le Graphidien

18 March, 2010

Home Beautiful's Style File This Month - Is Swimmingly Turquoise...

Loving this month's [April 2010 issue] Australian Home Beautiful's Style File - featuring Pantone's colour of the year 'Turquoise 15-5519'. I adore the 'Chinoiserie' feeling that is created using this hue here through multiple pattern, scale & shade use... and am in particular love with the silk wool floor rug 'Rmza' in Emerald [approx. $3,000.00 from 1.7, x 2.4m] from Mokum. Can I have it now!

Image from [Australian] Home BeautifulLink April 2010 issue. Issue now on sale at your local newsagent or supermarket.


20 January, 2010

The Power Of Turquoise...

Various shades of Turquoise & Teal, with hues of White & Natural Straw make for a contemporary, fun space.
Wallcoverings from 'York' - If you have enough pattern in a room, add texture and shimmer with glass bead encrusted or crystal embedded papers like those from York

Paint the room a bold, fresh yet calming colour!


Rooms to inspire - using the 'colour of the year' as confirmed by 'colour authority body' Pantone, here are some great ways to bring Turquoise (15-5519) through your interiors. Turquoise is great hue to do this as it's colour meaning is about - Love, healing, generosity, emotion, feeling , the unconscious , intuition, individual responsibility .creativity , communication, self reliance , independence. This color has more to do with feeling and creative expression than with rational thought. A mix of blue and green, turquoise has a sweet feminine feel while the darker teal shades add lively sophistication.... Enjoy!

Images from Elle Decor

11 January, 2010

Update... Trends in Decor/ Design & Furniture for 2010 - Pt I.

Since the Pantone Colour of the year announcement I have been on the look out for styling/ colour & deign forecasting... So for the beginning of the week - here's a great update on what's happening in Trends for Decor/ Design & Furniture for 2010, from Elle Decor (U.S) January 2010 issue where there appears to be 5 Main Trends areas, these are: 1. Illusion and Fantasy; 2. Folding & Pleating; 3.Handcrafted Details; 4. Honeycomb Patterns; and lastly 5.Turquoise Tones ...
Here you'll find Part I for the Trend Update 2010 - 1. Illusion and Fantasy; 2. Folding & Pleating; with Parts II - 3.Handcrafted Details; 4. Honeycomb Patterns& Part III - 5.Turquoise Tones, to follow this post...Hope you're inspired!.
Trend: Illusion and Fantasy
[above Image 1] The brick pattern from Sebastian Wrong and Richard Woods's far-from-ordinary upholstery collection is wonderfully deceptive. The irony lies in the extreme comfort of the seating in contrast to the perceived hardness of the print.

Trend: Illusion and Fantasy
[above Image 2] Italian designer Gaetano Pesce feels that it's important to express oneself in imagery and that storytelling is a crucial part of design. His nine-foot-long, two-seat sofa takes the concept over the top.
MossOnline.com.

Trend: Illusion and Fantasy
[above Image 3] Once again, Front showed its mastery of illusion with a subtle trompe l'oeil collection for Porro at the Milan fair. The cabinet has lightly drawn lines that suggest a curtain ruffled by the wind.
Porro.com.
Trend: Illusion and Fantasy
[above Image 4]Hyde House's collaboration with 55max.com, which offers works by more than 30 international artists and photographers, as well as iconic shots from the renowned Getty Images library, now allows consumers to pair art with wallpapers, fabrics and blinds. Here, Kate Martin's sensuous photograph Suck This is the basis for the surreal upholstery on these bar stools.
HydeHouse.co.uk and 55Max.com.

Trend: Folding and Pleating
[above Image 5]Dror Benshetrit's armchair has all the flair any fashionista might desire. It's created entirely from a single sheet of two-tone felt wrapped over a metal base.
Cappellini.it
Trend: Folding and Pleating
[above Image 6] U.K.-based Tomoko Kita, daughter of famed Japanese designer Toshiyuki Kita, is an accomplished product designer in her own right. Her book light folds tightly when closed and fans out to an ambient glow when opened and turned on. Available in a cloth, wood and leather cover, the perfect folds remain the highlight of each.
Tomokokita.com.

Trend: Folding and Pleating
[above Image 7] The Motley 3 Collection contains lamps that are shade and base in one; their solid plywood bases blossom into unique ribbed shades. The Complete lamp stood out as a favorite at London's 100% Design.
ChannelsDesign.com.
Trend: Folding and Pleating
[above Image 8] The New Zealand partnership Scott, Rich and Victoria debuted the spectacular Moscow Road Collection at London's 100% Design. Unit24, a folded, creased and rolled lamp shade, is inspired by traditional pleated-fabric shades and is offered as a pendant and floor lamp.
ScottRichandVictoria.com.

Design Trend Forecast 2010
After visiting the world’s premier design fairs and speaking with industry leaders in interior design, creative retail and product development, we’ve compiled a primer of the styles to watch and the products to snag in the new year Produced By Melissa Feldman and Anne E. Collins


“Survival mode” may have been the name of the game in 2009, but in 2010, the design world is looking to have a bit more fun. While designers are still conscious of the economic and environmental challenges ahead, the upcoming trends they’re fashioning impart a boost of happiness and a shot of color, as well as an infusion of surrealist fantasy and handmade charm.
With household budgets still at the top of everyone’s mind, quality and craftsmanship will also be of the utmost importance in the new year. Bonnie McKay, the director of creative retail at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, explains that people are “looking for things that are well made” and that “timeless pieces are the best investments.” As for the designers creating the products, Murray Moss, an American design entrepreneur and retailer, sees their new focus on handmade objects that are “decorative, tactile and narrative” as an instinctive reaction against cold and impersonal industrial materials. From the designer to the consumer, there is a desire for design to become more personal.
And if an assurance of quality isn’t enough to please the consumer, beauty and humor will. The product previews at fairs like iSaloni and 100% Design promised a smile in this new decade of shopping. Surreal shapes and fanciful imagery stimulated, while soothing colors like turquoise and purple made for pleasing displays.
From the trade show floors of Milan, New York, London, Las Vegas and Tokyo, here are the top design trends bubbling to the surface for 2010.
Illusion and FantasyPerhaps as an escape from a grim year, fantasy imagery and objects are emerging as a strong trend for 2010. Milan’s iSaloni has long been known as an influential furniture fair, and this year’s show revealed a variety of surrealist furniture and accessories, such as Gaetano Pesce’s fanciful Montanara sofa, which takes the form of mountain with a pattern of landscape painting. Meanwhile, at London’s Decorex, Hyde House displayed photorealistic fabrics of lush lips beckoning the trade-show attendees.
Folding and PleatingThe Japanese craft of origami objects made from cloth, ceramics and paper has inspired a wide range of products. From lighting to seating, Asian and European designers have latched onto the finely folded motif, as showcased at 100% Design with lighting fixtures by Scott, Rich and Victoria and at Milan with designer Dror Benshetrit’s Peacock chair.
Handcrafted DetailsThe 2009 shows proved that 2010 will be the year of craft. Embroidery, patchwork and handcrafted woods, all with an irregular and personal charm, emerged as the details to cherish. As Murray Moss says, even the industrially produced pieces were embellished with stitching and embroidery at the 2009 fairs. Bespoke textiles dominated at Decorex, and the edgy iSaloni fair showed more natural woods than ever.
HoneycombBritish decorator David Hicks and his legendary hexagon wallpaper have spawned a whole new generation of honeycomb patterns. From the Quilt Collection by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec for Established & Sons (shown in Milan) to Vincent Van Duysen’s hundreds of tiny intersecting tiles (shown at Cesarie), the hexagonal shape continues to multiply into the 21st century.
TurquoisePantone, the global color authority, just released its color for 2010: 15-5519 Turquoise, which conjures up images of tropical waters in shades of bluish-green. Traditionally the gem color is a symbol of healing, faith and truth, and it’s said to have positive vibrations. Whether designers were conscious of its deeper meaning or
not, the fashion-forward color made a strong showing at all the previews.
Images & Text - article from Elle Decor - [U.S magazine] Januray 2010 issue

05 January, 2010

Just Announced... Colour of the Year 2010

[Click on image to enlarge]
[Click on image to enlarge]


Yep it's official just in from the colour headquarters of the world... Pantone, I have just received the newsletter that announces the 'official' colour of the year for 2010 is - 'Turquoise 15-5519'.
Here's a little blurb from the Pantone website for their take on what this colour will mean to us in our physical, emotional, psychological, spiritual, cultural & economic - environments:

Pantone is pleased to announce PANTONE 15-5519 Turquoise, an inviting, luminous hue, as the Color of the Year for 2010. Combining the serene qualities of blue and the invigorating aspects of green, Turquoise inspires thoughts of soothing, tropical waters and a comforting escape from the everyday troubles of the world, while at the same time restoring our sense of well being.
In many cultures, Turquoise is believed to be a protective talisman, a color of deep compassion and healing, and a color of faith and truth, inspired by water and sky. Through years of color word-association studies, we also find that to many people, Turquoise represents an escape, taking them to a tropical paradise that is pleasant and inviting – even if it is only a fantasy.
Whether envisioned as a tranquil ocean surrounding a tropical island or a protective stone warding off evil spirits, Turquoise is a color that most people respond to positively. It is universally flattering, has appeal for men and women, and translates easily to fashion and interiors. With both warm and cool undertones, Turquoise pairs nicely with any other color in the spectrum. Turquoise adds a splash of excitement to neutrals and browns, complements reds and pinks, creates a classic maritime look with deep blues, livens up all other greens, and is especially trend-setting with yellow-greens.

What do you think? Is this a hue that you'd like to see more of in your interiors, exteriors, fashion and general surroundings?


Images from Pantone

20 March, 2009

Mimosa Yellow - Colour Me Happy...

A small break from the 'Greens' today as an article has just been released on the newest IT colour for 2009, Mimosa Yellow - above, from Leatrice Eiseman of the Pantone Institute of Colour, headquartered in Seattle United States. Leatrice’s prediction for 2009 is a colour she calls Mimosa [which is very similar to Australia's wattle flower]. Being a yellow it is very hopeful and full of optimism. Best illustrated by the abundant flowers of the Mimosa tree much like and the sparkle of the brilliantly hued cocktail, the 2009 color of the year represents the hopeful and radiant characteristics associated with the color yellow. Mimosa is a versatile shade that coordinates with any other color, has appeal for men and women, and translates to both fashion and interiors. Look for women's accessories, home furnishings, active sportswear and men's ties and shirts in this vibrant hue.

Mimosa Embodies Hopefulness and Reassurance in a Climate of Change
CARLSTADT, N.J., Dec. 3, 2008 - Pantone, an X-Rite company (NASDAQ: XRIT), and the global authority on color and provider of professional color standards for the design industries, today announced PANTONE® 14-0848 Mimosa, a warm, engaging yellow, as the color of the year for 2009. In a time of economic uncertainty and political change, optimism is paramount and no other color expresses hope and reassurance more than yellow.




































Happy Days... According to the Pantone Institute of Colour - Mimosa Yellow - is the IT Colour for 2009. Click on this link for more info...

Article from SMH (Sydney Morning Herald) Essential, Thursday 13 March 2009.


Images from Pantone Institute, SMH, Modern Living, House Beautiful, WGSN, Southern Accents, Living Etc. & Traditional Home.

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