Decorating Interiors using Cucumber Green Color

One of the coolest colors in the palette is a pale green, a green so pale that it's safer probably to say it's white with just a hint of green, rather than green watered down with white.

Often we look to nature for clues about colors. Keep a couple of cukes in the crisper, slice them and arrange on a blue plate, and you'll start feeling cooler even before you take a bite.

 So it is too with using cucumber green in your home decor. Here, we're talking about the color of the inside of the cuke, the palest shade of green. For now, peel away that rich, dark green shade of the cucumber skin – it's too dark for the summer months, and would work better sometime in February, when you want to brighten things up while keeping them warm.
When you're working with such a pale shade, it's particularly important to keep in mind the other colors in the room, and to work with them rather than against them, because you don't want that soft wash of pale green to be lost.

You can add the cooling properties of cucumber green temporarily, such as by adding throw pillows, area rugs, or other accessories. If your room has a lot of heavy, dark furniture, anything pale will draw the eye away from the darker colors; if you really want to highlight a lighter piece, such as a delicate cucumber-green vase, just place it against a dark background, whether it's against a maroon wall or set on a dark mahogany table set with deep blue placemats.

 The expected colors for the walls of a sun room might be warmer, such as yellows, but using a surprising cucumber green will keep the room cooler in the summer months, while providing a refreshing color tone as a backdrop for the furnishings.

If you do choose to color the walls of a porch or sunroom cucumber green, consider furnishing the room in a summery style, by using wicker, floral prints, and potted plants. A sisal carpet with a deeper green border can pull it all together.

Even your interior rooms could benefit from being re-painted with cucumber green. A room in the back of the house that doesn't get much light is a good candidate, as is a room with dark furniture that needs to be brightened up with lighter walls. Good choices for trim would be a slightly darker shade of the cucumber, or something from the other side of the color wheel, such as a deep pink.

The pale of cucumber can cool things off, even as the use of it fires up your passion for interior design.