We are looking for suggestions on the following: we are picking out colors for painting ceilings and woodwork (casings, etc.). We tried Benjamin-Moore’s “white-dove” on the ceiling but it looks kind of brown-ish. We are now considering B-M’s “ceiling white”. Our contractor told us that generally, people use the same color of the ceiling on their woodwork. Does anyone have thoughts on this and/or suggestions for what off-white would work for our woodwork? We have a variety of colors for the walls, including a light apricot, a light grey/blue, and a pale yellow for different rooms in the house. Thanks


Comments

  1. i would like to paint my living rooms – floor in an off white, but i hate yellowish tones. I chose Benjamin Moore’s Atrium white and White dove, but can’t decide! Please help. I am a fan of light beige as a shade. Which one do you suggest? Also, i wouldn’t like it to be bright white as such , i like it warmer. Which one of the two is the darkest?

  2. Some advise from my wife [who has been driving me crazy about paint color choices during a painting job ending–I hope– today]:

    1. Do VERY large test patches on more than one surface
    2. Examine the test areas using both daylight and the normal room lights (i.e, if you’ve removed glass from light fixtures, replace it before deciding if you like the color.

    To these I’d like to add, when your husband says “it doesn’t matter to me” please believe him 🙂

  3. We used BM Cloud white on our ceilings, trim, and built-ins and we’re really happy with how it turned out. Flat on the ceiling and semigloss on the rest.

  4. Can only speak from my own experience but I used China White on the ceiling and Bone White (which is really cream) on the trim.

  5. What your contractor may be saying is that painters sometimes use the same “white” paint for the plaster crown mouldings at the ceiling as is used to paint the rest of the room’s wood casework,(baseboards, doors, wainscoting, ect. This rule applies to the plaster medallions as well. Ceiling paint has special properties like high coverage low splatter, that make it a dependable choice but by all means not the only choice. Some people are turned off by the slightly cool nature of most ceiling whites, but if used in every room it helps pull the house together visually.

    I like low lustre enamels for trim and doors. I think BM makes a water based version of its satin impervo that does a pretty good job of duplicating what the more toxic enamel version did. You might have your painter add flotrol to it for better results.

    Decorators White in flat latex and the same color for the trim in semi gloss is a pretty standard choice, hence the name.

    I think if you check the BS archives you will find that there have been many helpful posts about paint in the past.

  6. Try BM linen white in semigloss for the trim. It’s a tad darker than decorators white; it almost has a slight patina. You might also consider atrium white. I’d go with BM ceiling white, as others have suggested.

  7. I ended up using (BM) Snowfall White (high gloss on the tin ceiling, flat for the walls and pearl finish on the woodwork) and it turned out GORGEOUS. Highly recommend it.

    A very nice soft white that still looks white without being TOO white.