5 Paint Color Choices For Provincial Furniture
Painting furniture can be an outstandingly satisfying craft. You can find an old, outdated piece and breathe new life into it with a simple color of paint. Once it’s in a new space, it can brighten and invigorate it, adding charm and drama all at the same time.
Sometimes the hardest decision of all is what color to use. When you want to go bold, here are some top color choices to consider.
Emerald Green
Emerald green is the hot color of 2013, according to the design industry. It connotes thoughts of riches and a recovering economy, and its lushness can bring a look of jewel luster into your home.
Because neutrals are still popular to decorate with, a splash of bright, bold, emerald green can be a lovely contrast against beiges and tans. Think about painting a chest or end table emerald green and adding some gold or silver accents or hardware. You’ll have a standout piece that will take charge.
Red
It seems red is a classic for painted furniture, one that can last through the years. Every room can hold a bold piece of red painted furniture, and the colors can range from candy apple to deep garnet. Like emerald green, a deep jewel tone will add drama, and a brighter red will add cheer.
Whether it’s a chair, table, or something else, a red accent piece of painted furniture will work well with almost any other color schemes, from neutral palettes to brighter colors ranging from blues to greens to yellows. Red can add freshness, drama, or whatever look you’re going for.
Blue
Colors of nature are very in right now, so painting a piece of furniture with the bold tones of blues in nature will be just the thing to do in 2013. Blue can be soothing like the sky, or invigorating like the sea. Choose from any blue shades to create a bold standout piece that will bring the natural world indoors.
Like red, blue tends to work well with most other color palettes and is a wonderful contrast to black and white.
Lavender
Whereas pink or purple may be too young to place in areas other than girl’s rooms in the home, lavender is like pink all grown-up. A single painted piece of lavender furniture will pop in a room and add that vintage drama that can bring the room to life.
Lavender is a great color to mix with other bold tones, like yellow and green, or use it against a white palette for extreme drama. Have fun with it – go bold – remember, it’s not a kid color anymore!
Yellow
Yellow is taking off on the runways now, so why not bring it in the home. A bold piece of yellow painted furniture, from chests to chairs to dining tables, will add a fresh new feel to any room.
Yellow can brighten darker areas and works great with natural woods or metallics. Don’t be afraid to go bold – lean towards the canaries, lemons, and golds rather than the softer butter and cream yellows.
Adding that piece of boldly painted furniture to your home will invigorate your home. Take a look around at what you have already; you never know, the very piece you want may already be in your home…just waiting.
Heather Legg is a writer who writes about small businesses and Spokeo removal, the art of creativity and keeping a positive perspective every day.
DE TONGE Provincial Table- Famous French Furniture Manufacture-Coco House, Palm Beach, FL
Wrought Iron Leaf Iron Chandelier In A Happy Yellow- dos gallos
Antique Yellow Painted Wicker Fiddelhead Chair – BG Galleries -Weymouth, MA
French Painted Tole Garden Table – Milord Antiques
Cabinet de curiosités Clément Lafaille, après 1766. Style néoclassique. Muséum d’histoire naturelle de La Rochelle. Source
Yellow Reproduction French Vaisselier- Traditional Home
Yellow Painted Provencal Armoire – Cote Jardin Antiques
Louis XV Painted Buffet – Bremermann Designs
French Commodes – Available Through Cote France
Marieclairemaison
French Painted Buffet Deux Corps- Jean Williams Antiques

Blue Painted French Furniture- European Paint Finishes
Etienne French Painted Furniture
Cote France Tables
Green Painted French Provence Styled Furniture- Available Through Cote France

Louis XV Period Painted Console Table, Bermingham and Co – New York
Au Rendez-Vous de Montmartre, Paris And Beyond Blog– Red Painted Desk Cote France
Red Painted French Louis XV Chest- Cote Jardin Antiques
Refractory French Provincial Leaf Tables
Some of the most rare french provincial tables are the refractory French Provincial leaf tables.
They are quite uncommon and innovative in their design, but hardly new.
Some of the earliest examples of refractory tables date back to 1600. Refractory tables have leaves hidden under the table and when pulled out, rise to the existing table top. In some designs, both leaves meet in the center of the table and can be flipped over which serve as the leaves.
Refractory leaf tables are often seen as an extra thick table top, in comparison to the tables with removable leaves which involve physically pulling the apart the table from each end.
These tables have additional leaves apart from the table and require manually inserting the table leaves into the middle section to extend the table.
Over the years of reselling vintage french provincial tables, I rarely came across a french table which still had the original leaves. Most people over the years have forgotten to donate the leaves, or somehow the leaves were misplaced as they moved from one house to the next. One advantage of a refractory french table is the physical table has the leaves already in place. This beautiful design is rare in a french style, and simply one of the most stunning designs that are available.




















































