These little colour “snaps” extend to all adventures outside my home, too. Even on walks around my local area, I will spot a pile of colourful buckets, bright and muddy tones haphazardly thrown together or the dusty, almost-velvety, sun-faded paint on a garden gate. Moments that are just so happy and joyful, adding a boost to my day. Of course, the opportunity to travel is the most exciting, where new types of light and colour palettes bring exciting combinations that feel novel and unusual. In fact, as I write this, I am in Jaipur, India where the explosion of colour and its specular golden light have meant myriad ideas have been committed to some sort of colour memory bank, stored as inspiration for future interior projects.
Colour will often be spoken about as a visual experience but it really is such an emotional one, too, and I sometimes wonder if it is also genetic. The green-blue shades are where this really comes home for me. I can’t see a turquoise piece of pottery without thinking of my mother, and my childhood home, full of Jade-green glazed pots and vases that my mother collected and used on a daily basis. I rebelled when I was a little younger and threw out those green-blue shades from my palette, but I’ve realised that I can’t get away from them – they run in my blood. I have embraced that nostalgia and childhood association and I have invited these shades into my home in all their forms; turquoise, jade green, aquas, powder blues, duck eggs and verdigris. I mean, for goodness’ sake, my middle name is Jade! I really believe that your home is an opportunity to decorate through memories, travels you have taken and moments from your childhood. By introducing colours we feel fondly about or associate with positive memories, we create a reflection of our inner selves to feel truly at home.