japanese-home-gardens.com
 

 

Home | About | Contact | Site Map | Links | Library

Main Menu

Japanese Garden Design

Japanese Garden Planning

Shape Of Japanese Gardens

Garden Topography

Japanese Garden Trellis

Japanese Garden Containers

Garden Construction

Decking And Patios

Plant Care And Cultivation

Garden Materials

Gardening With Herbs

Boundaries

Japanese Trees

The Water Garden

Outdoor Gardeners

Japanese Plants

Hanging Baskets Of Babylon

Ponds And Edging

Rhododendrons

Clematis

Perennials

Gardening With Herbs

Biennials

Bulbs Garden

Lilies Garden

Water Garden

Japanese Garden Basket

Elements Of Design

Gardener Techniques

Gardener Tools

Cultivation

Protection

Home Gardening

New York Gardeners

Rock Gardening

Home Garden Town

Blocks

Shrub Garden

Blue

Scent

Garden Materials

Fall

Low Maintenance Gardens

Rock-garden Plants

Flowers For Beautiful Gardens

Japanese Roses

Garden Accesories

Bedding Plants

 

Unique Home Furniture, Home Decorating and Home Decoration Store

Apple Green Color:

Apple Green Color Among the varieties of chalcedony, carnelian, or sard, is red or brownish-red; chrysoprase, apple-green; prase, a dull, darker green; plasma, leek green or emerald green; and bloodstone, dark green with small red spots, like drops of blood. Agate, a chalcedony with delicate parallel bands of color, or irregularly clouded color effects, is white, red, brown, or blue. Moss agate contains mosslike forms caused by oxide of manganese. In onyx, the differently colored bands are straight and parallel. Sardonyx is onyx containing bands of carnelian (sard).

In a sunny family kitchen, the scarlet tones of terracotta tiles, patterned blinds, and a range of accessories can appear to be friendly and inviting. In a bedroom, combining deep and pale tones of rose and peach in the wallpaper, bedspread, and curtains can produce a country-style atmosphere. For something different in the bathroom, consider shocking pink carpeting set against wallpaper decorated with a riot of enormous roses. You can build an entire color scheme around a single item such ; rug, or a piece of furniture. For example, your imagination may t inspired by a wooden hutch painted a rough apple green color. This color contrasts wonderfully with brown, and so it is ideally suited to a room with a natural wood floor, unpainted brick wall: and pine furniture. The effect you are trying for can be further heightened with additional touches of the same green - for example, in cushion covers, painted window frames, and perhap few accessories. Green is the color we associate with living things, so it is an easy hue to live with and a popular choice for decorating scheme Particularly if you live in a city, it makes sense to bring the color: re indoors; the varieties of green range from earth green to : green, emerald to turquoise. Consider enhancing a range of :nswith a flush of deep purple for a rich, almost regal effect. :or a color scheme that is strikingly different, consider Drating areas of your home in bold blocks of primary colors.


Mixing two primary colors in equal proportion results in the formation of the secondary colors - orange, violet, and green. When a primary color is mixed with an adjacent secondary color, a tertiary color - such as red-violet or blue-green - is produced. Seeing colors as spokes of a wheel enables you to see how one color relates to another.

 

Home | About | Contact | Site Map | Links | Library