Using Color Psychology To Sell Your Home
When
painting your New Jersey home for resale, choosing the right colors can make
a huge difference in your paycheck at closing. For instance, did you know that
the exterior color of houses selling most quickly is a certain shade of yellow,
but that choosing the wrong shade of yellow can kill a sale?
You'll find many brochures in paint stores, showing various combinations of
exterior paint colors. But most people don't realize that most of those
combinations actually include three colors, and not just two. Limiting your
exterior paint scheme to just two colors also limits your income potential.
For a fast sale, think fun colors and go for a third, or even a fourth, exterior
color. Think "Disneyland Main Street," where every shop is painted in glorious
multi-colors. Adding more colors will also add definition to the various
architectural details of your home. Use gloss or semi-gloss paint on wood trim.
The Psychology of Exterior Colors
When choosing exterior colors, take the sales price of your home into
account. Certain colors, especially muted, complex shades, attract wealthy or
highly-educated buyers, whereas buyers with less income or less education
generally prefer simpler colors. A complex color contains tints of gray or
brown, and usually requires more than one word to describe, such as "sage
green," as opposed to "green."
On the other hand, simple colors are straightforward and pure. Generally, houses
in the lower price range sell faster and for higher prices when painted in
simple colors like yellow or tan, accented by white, blue, or green trim.
The Psychology of Interior Colors
Using colored, rather than bland, white walls will increase your profit
potential. Lynette Jennings tested the perception of room size and color, and
discovered that a room painted white appeared only appeared larger to a few
people when compared to an identical room painted in color – and the perceived
difference was only about six inches! Most people also look better when
surrounded by color, and feel happier, and since buyers pick houses that make
them feel happy, that knowledge can put dollars in your pocket at closing!
Entryways should bring the exterior colors into the house. Repeating shades of
the exterior throughout your home will make the entire home seem to be in
harmony. Living and family rooms painted in a slightly lighter shade of the
exterior color will ensure that you've picked a color your buyers like, because
if they didn't like your exterior colors, they wouldn't have bothered to look
inside. If they loved the exterior colors, they'll love the interior, too.
When choosing interior colors, consider the use of each room. For instance,
kitchen and dining areas that are painted in “food colors,” such as coffee
browns, celery greens, and scrambled egg yellows, feel natural.
Since, deeper shades of color imply intimacy and serenity, I like to paint
master bedrooms a medium shade of green or blue for warm selling seasons, and
rouge red for cooler weather. Other bedrooms can be painted in creamy tones of
green, blue, or a pale shell pink. (See the chapter on the Psychology of Color
in my book "Joy to the Home: Secrets of Interior Design Psychology" for further
information.)
(c) Copyright 2004, Jeanette J. Fisher. All rights
reserved.
Professor Jeanette Fisher, author of Doghouse to Dollhouse for Dollars, Joy to
the Home, and other books teaches Real Estate Investing and Design Psychology.
For more articles, tips, reports, newsletters, and sales flyer template, see
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