Colorful living room ideas can make your space really joyful. However, curating a palette for a colorful interior scheme isn’t the easiest thing to do. Combining colors deftly is a serious skill, which draws on choosing the right combination of colors, but also how they’re balanced.
The best colorful living rooms you’ll see have a certain je ne sais quoi when it comes to how the colors are combined. Their success can feel immeasurable, something based on an instinctual understanding of how color works.
Whether you think you have that skill or not, taking inspiration for your living room color ideas is a great place to start. That might be a palette you see almost anywhere, whether that’s from the interiors of hotels and restaurants or fashion and beauty looks.
However, real rooms can prove the most useful inspiration for gleaning a color palette. They give you a sense of how to scale and combine colors that can really help your own design. With that in mind, we’ve sought out some intriguing and brave colorful living room ideas, with tips and tricks for how to make a similar scheme work, even for those who aren’t color confident.
Take palette inspiration from these colorful living room ideas
If you’re considering going colorful for your living room design, then experimenting with colors is a great place to start. Planning with a physical moodboard of samples is important when a design hinges so much on creating a cohesive palette, and don’t forget to test colors in the room they’re going in, as the light will change how you perceive them.
In the case of paint, that means trying it on every wall too to see how it looks at different orientations and at different times of day. Painting a room can be a significant expense if you’re investing in good quality paint, but it’s not such a permanent choice that you can’t change your mind later if a color doesn’t work quite as planned. Making a bold, colorful decision might be a tactical risk, but one that can pay dividends.
1. Draw a colorful palette from an existing piece
You might not always have the opportunity to get an interior designer or color expert in to design your home, but fortunately, masters of color are hard at work designing home furnishings that you can draw a well-formed color palette. From artwork to textiles, rugs to wallpaper, there are all kinds of objects in a living room design that can be a source of color inspiration.
In this living room created by Roisin Lafferty, creative director of interior design studio Kingston Lafferty, the bold color palette of seemingly incongruous shades hangs together perfectly. It also aligns with the palette of this colorful Sputnik-style living room lighting idea, which holds the color scheme together.
‘It was really about taking an artistic approach and looking at how paintings and bold artwork can manage to merge and combine so many different colors and tones,’ explains Roisin. ‘We wanted to bring that playfulness to a space and apply an almost painterly approach. There is a deliberate graphicness to the design with influence from artist Joseph Albers as well as the contrasting primary colors in the vintage Italian sputnik light fitting we sourced as the centerpiece.’
2. Use classic color combinations as a base
Getting creative with a color palette for your living room doesn’t mean going beyond what you already know works. Start your color scheme by choosing your favorite duo, and building on it with other hues that work with both individually.
In this basement snug of a Brooklyn Brownstone designed by MKCA, for example, the base of the color palette is based on the fact that pink is a great color that goes with green. Pink walls and a tonally shifting green tiled floor create a base for other colors to interact with, including a blocky dark blue sofa. ‘We purposefully selected simple, hefty forms and pieces that were a single color that would hold their own against some of the strong colors of the architecture,’ Michael K Chen, founder of MKCA says.
Each pairing works individually, but together they form a well-rounded triadic color scheme that has more dimension (and color) than a simple two-tone scheme.
3. Don’t be afraid to clash, too
Sometimes, for a bold and unapologetic colorful living room, creating cohesion with color isn’t the objective at all. This was the case for this 1960s home in Australia designed by YSG Studio, where colors used for a wall mural and furnishings clash, but in a complimentary way.
‘This project is an ‘all in’ commitment to self-expression as the owners wholeheartedly wanted to embrace their fearless love of color which plays a pivotal role with contrasting quiet and bold schemes,’ explains interior designer Yasmine Ghoniem, founder of YSG Studio.
‘A local Sydney company, Lymesmith, created the mural on the brick wall behind the fireplace. The abstract artwork was inspired by aerial photographs of the property’s coastal location, animating the area with a welcomed alternative to a digital TV screen whilst complementing the new paving with its angular forms,’ she explains.
‘Whilst it influenced color selections for furniture, it didn’t dictate them as I never fall for ‘matchy-matchy’ conclusions,’ Yasmine adds. ‘I’m an avid believer in complimentary clashes. The quiet tones – warm shades of white and mushroom pinks – are the base neutral shades holding everything together to create harmony, whilst the brighter and deeper shades draw attention to the living areas and modular hero decor items.’
4. Combine colorful elements with white walls
Colorful walls aren’t for everyone, but paint and wallpaper aren’t the only way to create a space infused with color. Building up color with furnishings on a neutral base is a great way to create an experimental palette, but one that doesn’t overwhelm the space.
You should, however, be wary of how much color contrast occurs when using white walls as a backdrop. ‘If you have white walls and you buy yourself a red sofa, all you’re going to see in that room is the red sofa because the contrast between the two is so high,’ says Dagny Thurmann-Moe, founder of Koi Colour Studio.
Working for lighter tones that create less contrast makes for a scheme that’s easier to hang together, and that can be design forward too. In this living room idea, created by Korner Interiors using its collaboration furniture with the Invisible Collection, showcases a grown-up approach to decorating with pastels, against a white-walled room.
‘Bold color combinations are one of the most effective ways to get your attention but too much of a bold color can overwhelm the details of the space,’ says Katie Paulsen, interior designer at Maestri Studio. ‘Playing with that balance and incorporating textures and pattern can create a color combination that is truly effective.’
5. Use a wallpaper to introduce color
For a readymade designer color scheme, look to colorful wallpaper ideas and mural designs to form the crux of your living room palette. A design such as this, a hand-painted ‘Jazz’ design wallpaper with hand-embroidered Linen appliqué created by luxury wallpaper brand De Gournay as a bespoke installation for its London showroom, introduces all the color you need for a colorful living room look, meaning you can keep the rest of the scheme relatively simple.
Choosing to go all out on the walls and keeping your furniture and decor neutral means that your scheme will be easily adaptable should you wish to change it up in a similar way in the future, too.
6. Try a twist on a tonal scheme
Tonal color schemes are made up of neighboring hues on a color wheel that have a natural affinity when used together. Depending on how granular you want to go, a tonal color scheme could be made of different tones of the same color, or similar shades.
In this purple and green living room design by Kingston Lafferty, tonal greens, blues and purples create a space that’s big on color but still feels restful to the eye. ‘We wanted to exude a sense of opulence and rich sophistication and wanted the richness of color to be created with natural stone,’ explains Roisin Lafferty, creative director of Kingston Lafferty. ‘The stone in this room is full of beautiful green tones and almost becomes a natural art piece and focal point in the room.’
‘By using natural materials as the key color insertion, we have created a home that hinges on color but manages to be timeless and full of character.,’ she explains.
The trick to rounding out this space? A pop of contrasting orange – a color from the complete opposite side of the color wheel – and wood create an accent that sets off these rich, jewel tones. ‘As well as the stone being the color center point, rich timber tones deliberately contrast and intensify depth,’ Roisin says.
7. Mix up lightness levels to make your scheme work
So you’ve decided on the colors for your scheme, but how do you mix them together successfully? To achieve balance, playing with color ‘values’ is the key. Values are how light or dark a color is, and combining three different values can help create a sophisticated yet colorful look for your living room.
‘I prefer to combine hues with different lightness levels,’ says Dagny Thurmann-Moe of Koi Colour Studio, who created the color story for this orange, green and pink living room, ‘it results in an all-over more interesting look,’
With moldings painted in Pure & Original’s Traditional Paint Eggshell in dark, rich Daybreak and Wetlands and walls in Pale Terracotta Licetto, a vibrant orange accent is introduced as an in-between to complete this refined pink living room scheme.
What colors are on-trend for living rooms?
Living rooms are one of the spaces in the home where people can feel most confident in exploring color trends. In bathrooms and kitchens, bold color choices can feel too permanent, while there’s a tendency to lean towards calming colors for bedrooms.
But what is trending in living room colors right now? Green is an always popular color, but bolder, more vibrant olive green is the direction color trends for the living room are heading right now.
On the flip side, for a soft, delicate color palette, but one that still feels colorful and exciting, designers are recommending lavender as a way to bring energy through less in-your-face tones.