Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - thanks all. Comments are all over the place, but generally make me feel better about the choice. With the dark wood floors and some of our colorful rugs and paintings, I think it will soon look right. The family room actually looks a lot like 10:32's second photo (and thanks for the photos - v. helpful). Our furniture is not bright but neither is it white or neutral either, so it's not like an all white house, just all white walls/trim/ceiling. I'm interested by several comments about not using the same white on wall and trim - it seems to me that it would be hard to use different shades of white - wouldn't they look funny, like something is off? We just planned to use different finishes - matt on ceiling, eggshell on walls and semigloss on trim, but all the same shade (BM Dove White).
Not necessarily -- a bright white on the trim and a softer white on the walls can be a sharp look.
But it's also not like you'll never be able to paint your walls again. You can get your furniture in there, live with it a while and then decide if you want to go in another direction.

Anonymous wrote:All white is actually perfectly fine -- check pictures or Haussmanian apartments in Paris or Hampton interiors. The trick is furniture and textures. Let the furniture add color depending on the type of house and your particular taste. If you go all white, you will need different textures in furniture, area rugs, and the like, keeping in mind wall and ceiling light fixtures.
If your house is traditional, consider painting some of the smaller walls in an off white or pastel hues, as to keep some color.
white house is a much better blank canvas than a beige house.

Anonymous wrote:OP here - thanks all. Comments are all over the place, but generally make me feel better about the choice. With the dark wood floors and some of our colorful rugs and paintings, I think it will soon look right. The family room actually looks a lot like 10:32's second photo (and thanks for the photos - v. helpful). Our furniture is not bright but neither is it white or neutral either, so it's not like an all white house, just all white walls/trim/ceiling. I'm interested by several comments about not using the same white on wall and trim - it seems to me that it would be hard to use different shades of white - wouldn't they look funny, like something is off? We just planned to use different finishes - matt on ceiling, eggshell on walls and semigloss on trim, but all the same shade (BM Dove White).
Anonymous wrote:I would go with more of an antique white for the walls and ultra pure white for trim. It looks much more polished than stark white on both. You can always add color as the room grows on you (we have slowly started painting one or two rooms a year). We have also added chair molding, dual paint colors etc. We have been in the house 7 years. It is much easier when you do one room at a time with regard to color IMO, so you don't get too overwhelmed!
Anonymous wrote:That sounds really depressing...
