20 paint ideas that are easy to achieve, but will transform your home from ordinary to extraordinary

Paint ideas that show how the world's most creative interiors designers are using paint right now in their decorating schemes

three different color rooms next to each other
(Image credit: Margart de Lange. Color/styling: Koi Colour Studio. Paint: Pure & Original)

Paint ideas are the great equalizer when it comes to decorating our homes. Yes, while it's true that all paint isn't the same quality, a lot of budget-friendly paint brands are just as great to use as the more premium offerings, and when it comes down to it, it's down to the choices and creativity of the person applying it as to how it can elevate the space. 

It's unsurprising, then, that many of my favorite interior-designed spaces use paint in innovative and interesting ways - after all, these are the ideas that every home can take inspiration from. 

It's also so easy to tailor a good paint idea to your own tastes. The designers of these 20 creative spaces may have chosen a specific color for their schemes, but each can be easily changed to match your own home decor. 

20 paint ideas for a creative finish to your walls

If you think of creatively using paint, you might go straight to bold, colorful designs. Yet, the best uses of paint understand that there's beauty in the understated, as well as the exciting. 

With that in mind, these 18 schemes span from colorful modern looks to designs where paint color ideas creates a soothing space, ensuring you've got the best of both worlds to choose from. 

Where to shop for paint online

1. Go bold with outdoor paint 

an outdoor space with colorful painted rendered beds

(Image credit: King Celia Studio)

It's the season for outdoor living, so let's start our journey into paint with a much overlooked source of decorating joy - outdoor paint. While backyards tend to be spaces where you embrace natural hues, if you're into color and maximalism, it can also be the perfect canvas for more creative paint ideas. Just ask interior designer Jess Piddock (opens in new tab), founder of King Celia Studio, who decided to go bold in her own colorful backyard design. 

'I painted all the rendered exterior walls in the garden and courtyard in this peachy pink because it's uplifting whatever the weather and also looks great with greenery,' Jess tells us. 'I had to use different colors in the garden and courtyard because the light levels are so different (and if I’d have used exactly the same they wouldn’t actually match).' 

'The paint matches the courtyard tiles, some of the interior woodwork, and the pattern matches my kitchen tiles. Repeating elements is a great way to create rhythm between the spaces,' Jess adds.

2. Paint a room's entryway

a kids room with a red painted entryway corridor

(Image credit: The Vawdry House)

Want to embrace color, but not across the whole room? Interior designer Sophie Chapman (opens in new tab) from the Vawdry House used a clever trick for this kids room paint idea you should try. 

'For rooms that start with a bit of a corridor, a great way to add impact is by painting the entrance way in a single bold color and painting the rest of the room in a neutral tone,'' Sophie explains. 'This is a top tip for those that love color but are wary of going too far. With this approach if you need to refresh or change the color at any point you aren't committed to doing the whole room.' 

3. Make a bold move with your trim

a kitchen diner with bold paint colors

(Image credit: Richard Chivers. Design: Astrain Scheldt Architects)

When you want to do something bold, your first thought may be to pick a vibrant shade for the walls, but you can make just as much of an impact by using paint ideas to highlight smaller details. 'We work with a lot of color and pattern and have learned over the years that people live happily with patterns when the eye has space to rest in the room,' says Studio Munroe's Emilie Munroe (opens in new tab). When combining a lot of different colors in a space, a more neutral wall can provide relief and help the whole palette hang together better, as in this kitchen-diner design where the wall and door trim is painted in a soft, dusky red. 

'Working with clients that had such a bold vision made this home a joy to design,' Irene Astrain (opens in new tab), co-founder of Astrain Scheldt Architects tells us. 'This color palette is such a success because it hangs together throughout the other rooms in the house, too.' 

4. Design in a modern mural

A piece of wall art in the form of a fresco

(Image credit: Mister Tripper. Art: Florence Bamberger)

Wall murals can feel like a lot, and when it comes to paint murals vs wallpapers, there's also a lot of work that needs to go into making sure the proportions work well with your space. However, in the best examples, wall murals become a part of the fabric of your space. 

'Frescoes are where art becomes architectural,' artist Florence Bamberger (opens in new tab) tells us, 'where interiors become truly artistic, graphic and unique.' This mural is inspired by the surroundings and the native terracotta of the Provence region, where the home is located. 'When the fresco is directly inspired by a personal story, or by the story of a house, it makes a lot of sense and seems to have been there always,' Florence says. 

5. Don't forget the ceiling

a bedroom suited with a light blue painted ceiling

(Image credit: Thomas Kuoh. Design: Studio Munroe)

The new accent wall, painted ceiling ideas have become a hugely popular trend recently. Whether you're opting for something bold, or something that creates a calming effect for your space, painting with plain white overhead is taking a backseat to a more colorful approach. 

'We wanted this bedroom to feel serene and calm, like a warm spring day,' says interior designer Emilie Munroe, founder of Studio Munroe, of this relaxing bedroom scheme. 'Because the background color of the wallpaper is aqua blue, using white on the ceiling would have actually felt high-contrast and jarring.  By matching the aqua on the ceiling, the room now feels cozy and grounded.' 

6. Go bold with the color blocking trend 

color block semi-circle around a sideboard

(Image credit: Yadnyesh Joshi. Design: Zero9)

The modern trend for color blocking focuses around painting abstract shapes on your walls, ceilings and more, creating simple, yet bold murals in bold color palettes.  In some instances, they're more effective than others, and in this design by Mumbai-based interior design and architecture firm Zero9, this creative space has been designed in conjunction with the placement of furniture to highlight certain aspects and zone the room with color

'The living room is a visual treat right from the entrance door with its pop of colors and an experimental color blocking which uses the walls and floor as the canvas for this artistic expression,' explains designer Prashan Chauhan (opens in new tab). 'The furniture complements the visuals with its sharp contrasts in form and color.'

7. Combine paint and paneling

A bedroom with a color swatch on a wooden wall

(Image credit: Shiraz Jamali Architects)

Paint and wall paneling have always made easy partners. Paneling makes for an obvious feature wall, for example, while wainscoting lends itself to creating rooms that can be split through the middle with color. 

However, there are also designers who look to disrupt this easy-going relationship by introducing elements of color blocking walls outside of the natural end-points of paneling. Paneling, in many ways, feels so structured that this disruptive use of paint brings a freedom to it, while also giving more traditional paneling styles a sense of freshness. 

8. Set your sights on color drenching

a red painted snug office room

(Image credit: Robert Gracia. Design: Lala Reimagined)

Color drenching refers to a relatively new paint trend where you paint the ceiling and walls the same color. You can also, even, include the trim, doors, crown moldings and more in your one-color scheme, painting the entire space in a single shade. The effect? Not only does it create a pared-back canvas to decorate, lending a modern look even to spaces featuring more traditional architectural details, but it also plays with the dimensions of the rooms by blurring the lines between the ceiling and the walls. 

'These days with all the chaos in the world, creating a cocoon in one's personal space is more important than ever,' adds interior designer Lia McNairy of LALA Reimagined. 'This is why we love to paint the ceiling, walls, crown molding and baseboards all in one color to give us a sense of security and make one feel like we are living in a jewel box. Small rooms are perfect for experimenting with a bold color and especially a powder room to get your feet wet without having to make a huge commitment elsewhere in the house!'

9. Take color drenching to the next level

a completely pink home office space

(Image credit: Eve Wilson. Design: Chelsea Hing)

There isn't just one way to do color drenching. For some, it's about making the walls and ceilings the same color, while some will opt to make kitchen cabinets match the wall color, for example. The most exciting and design forward of these spaces do it all, however. 

'Wrapping a room in full color, even the floors – can create a true element of surprise,' interior designer Chelsea Hing (opens in new tab) tells us. In her soft pink home office design, the walls, millwork, trim, ceiling and even the carpet and textiles are all almost entirely the same color. It makes what could feel like a pretty pedestrian set-up feel exciting and design-forward. 

10. Transform with two tone walls

Wooden door with black frame and surrounding walls painted in beige and taupe with a black dado rail in the middle

(Image credit: Soho House Amsterdam)

Two-tone walls with the introduction of a dado rail that runs between the colors is one of the most on-trend ways to transform a room. A dado is an architectural molding often found in most Georgian, Victorian, and Edwardian houses where period features have been preserved or restored. They are used in modern interiors to provide a break between the lower portion and upper portion of a wall and a fun opportunity to use a variety of wall-coverings or colors within the same room.

'For the chic hallways in Soho House Amsterdam we painted the lower half of the walls a creamy coffee color and used a light neutral on top then added a smart black dado line and black door frames to create a strong visual connection,' explains Sevverine Lamonglia, Lead Designer at Soho House. 'Two-tone walls can transform a space, it adds depth and detail to a wall. It is also easy to do and a cost-effective way of adding character.'

11. Match your skirting with the wallpaper

Bedroom with blue patterned wallpaper and glossy blue skirting board

(Image credit: The Bear Inn)

A really easy way to update your bedroom colors (or colors in ay room really) that doesn't require a complete overhaul and most likely an afternoon of relaxing DIY is by painting skirting that is often kept simple in a bright hue.

'Skirtings and cornices don’t have to be an off-white and eggshell and gloss don’t have to be left just for the woodwork,' says interior designer Octavia Dickinson (opens in new tab). 'While decorating a bedroom at The Bear Inn, Hodnet, I picked out colors in the wallpaper and painted the skirtings in a bright glossy blue which instantly modernizes the room and frames the wallpaper.'

12. Color contrast adjoining rooms

Green bedroom with pink hallway beyond

(Image credit: Natalie Tredgett)

Choosing contrasting colors in adjacent rooms and considering how room colors look when viewed from one to another is a clever way to create a flow of hues throughout the space.  This lovely jade green bedroom has a view through to a candy pink hallway – part of a series of colorful rooms designed by Natalie Tredgett (opens in new tab).

'When deciding what colors to use in two adjoining rooms consider the conversation between the spaces,' says Natalie. 'Our eye is drawn to warmer colors, so lead with a pink, coral, or terracotta to naturally draw someone in that direction. Then create layers and complexity by making the next room a cooler color like green, teal, or blue.'

13. Layer a symphony of whites

White kitchen flooded with light and wooden and silver utensils

(Image credit: Tutti Meme)

Is going all white really a color update when it is is one of the most common color choices when decorating an interior? Far from ordinary and safe this lovely white kitchen belonging to designer Caroline Feiffer layers a symphony of whites in an array of finishes and features highlights of glossy white marble and burnished silver details from kitchen accessories and exposed pipes.

'I love a gallery approach to designing in general, using a white space and for objects to be able to stand out without any noise.' says Caroline Feiffer founder of studio Tutti Meme. 'I therefore naturally turn to whites and especially warmer whites as these give a sense of sunlight flushing in. The color in this kitchen from our old Copenhagen townhouse apartment, features a brighter matte white on the walls, the beams a more glossy and a bit warmer hue, and for the kitchen a warm white from farrow and ball called Pointing No. 2003, a warm and delicate white.'

14. Make door frames pop

a room with a blue door and teal door trim

(Image credit: Josh Thornton. Design: Summer Thornton Design)

There's nothing like a lick of glossy bold color to energize and instantly modernize a traditional space. This totally stylish playroom by Summer Thornton Design features paperwhite walls with door trims picked out in brilliant blue gloss.

'Pick out door frames in contrasting hues to introduce some excitement.' says Joa Studholme (opens in new tab), Color Curator at Farrow and Ball. 'School House White is pared back, timeless, and familiar on walls but has a subtle sophistication that makes it the perfect foil for stronger hues like the lively tones of Stone Blue.' 

15. Take color to the window frames

a living room with blue painted ceiling, trim and windows

(Image credit: Thomas Kuoh. Design: Studio Munroe)

Your window frames are the perfect canvas to experiment with paint too. For a feature, you could use an accent color to decorate your windows, or to make your woodwork act more cohesively, try painting it to match other elements in your space, as in this living room paint idea by Studio Munroe. 

'Here, we used the same color paint on both the trim and ceiling, so the floral wallpaper was the star of the room with the lovely architectural woodwork details clearly taking the backseat,' explains interior designer Emilie Munroe. 'If we had highlighted the casework in a separate paint color, the room would risk feeling overwhelming or chaotic with each element vying for the front stage.' 

16. Embrace the trend for glossy finishes 

A dining table in a restaurant with glossy yellow walls

(Image credit: Fettle)

Inspiration for paint ideas are everywhere and borrowing from your favorite restaurants and design-led haunts is an exciting way to bring a little bit of that social buzz home. As this new restaurant Isola in St. Christopher’s Place by interior architects Fettle proves, gloss is back and is looking like a huge interior design trend.

'The color palette for Isola restaurant was inspired by Grand Sicilian Manorhouses,' says Andy Goodwin, founder of Fettle. 'We utilized pale yellow polished plaster with a high gloss finish and applied it with a brush to ensure that the strokes create movement and texture. Using high gloss paint finishes helps to ensure the available natural light bounces around the room.'

17. Get creative with decorative shapes

painted scalloping painted wave effect on wall


(Image credit: 2LG)

How fabulous is this kitchen diner designed by 2LG Studio (opens in new tab)? There's so much inspiration we could take from this space but lets just focus on the paint idea that frames the door. It's fun, playful, and adds a whimsical touch – and yet it feels very chic and grown-up.

Recreating this look is super simple too, all it takes is a pot of paint (you could use a sample pot even), a small paintbrush, a pencil, and some patience. You could get technical with tape, but with a design like this, we'd say your fine to freehand it. Just lightly draw your design with a pencil and then start painting. 

18. Give old floor boards a new lease of life

Blue stripe painted floorboards with a bureau desk

(Image credit: Farrow and Ball)

Painted floorboards are a classic look, and you can create so many looks to suit your style from super simple whitewashed boards to checkerboard flooring or stripes as can be seen here. 

‘Painting the floor with an accent color brings a huge amount of drama to a space,’ says chalk paint expert Annie Sloan (opens in new tab). ‘Keep the rest of the room neutral with soft nude browns such as taupes or fawns to focus attention on the floor. Or go for white walls – but be sure to choose a warm-toned or neutral white rather than one with blue undertones as this could make the space feel stark.’

19. Use paint to revive old furniture

a kitchen with painted dining chairs


(Image credit: Future)

Upcycle tired furniture with bold accent shades to breathe new life into old pieces. Bright yellows, bold blues, vibrant reds, and rich emerald greens are great for invigorating furniture. They’ll complement the popular navy blue and grey neutrals that we’re seeing in many homes. Here, odd chairs are united with a hit of blue. 

Check out our guide on how to paint furniture – it's a super quick job that can be achieved in a couple of hours. 

20. Go paintless and embrace a raw plaster finish

Bathroom with plaster pink walls and mint green chandelier

(Image credit: Holloway Li)

Raw plaster walls have a beautiful texture and inject a subtle, earthy wash of color to your home. They provide a wonderful canvas for brighter colors to shine too, from pastels to bold neons like in this light-filled bathroom by interior designers Holloway Li. 

'Don’t use any paint at all and retain the raw plaster look,' advises Alex Holloway, founder of Holloway Li Interior Architects.  'We found a sealer called PROTECTiT100 that binds the raw plaster so it doesn’t leave a dusty deposit and means the space captures the raw feeling and is a lot easy to repair and patch over time, without having to repaint the whole room each time.'  

What brand of paint should I buy?

First things first, work out your budget. There are certain paints that cost a lot more than others, and while you may be paying for a better overall finish on the walls and easier application, you can still achieve great things with more budget offerings. 

Paint preferences are specific to who you are and how you like to paint. Ask for recommendations from friends or even contractors, but if you check out the reviews online, you're likely to find just as many negative as positive ones, depending on who the person is and the sort of paint they like to use. 

If you're hung up on a particular shade from a high-cost brand, it may be possible to color match with a cheaper, custom-mixed paint company. However, bear in mind that the make-up of the paint actually effects the final look in the room and how the light hits it, so it's impossible to perfectly replicate this element. 

Where should I start painting a room?

In general, all rooms are painted from the top down, so if you have a ceiling to paint, start there before doing the walls. 

Most painters and decorators advocate for 'cutting in' first - this is where you paint around the edges with a paint brush - before using a roller to fill in the rest of the wall. 

What paint ideas can I create with tape?

Decorator's tape is a useful tool for getting the best finish when it comes to how to paint a room, but it can also be used to create interesting paint effects on your walls and more. 

Tape can be used to mask out areas for a color blocked scheme, for example, while you could even use tape to create stripes or a grid-like design too. 

Many people have found tape useful for angular, geometric wall designs, though these have fallen somewhat out of fashion for more organic shapes, which would need to be painted freehand. 

Hugh Metcalf
Deputy Editor

Hugh is the Deputy Editor of Livingetc.com. From working on a number of home, design and property publications and websites, including Grand Designs, ICON and specialist kitchen and bathroom magazines, Hugh has developed a passion for modern architecture, impactful interiors and green homes. Whether moonlighting as an interior decorator for private clients or renovating the Victorian terrace in Essex where he lives (DIYing as much of the work as possible), you’ll find that Hugh has an overarching fondness for luxurious minimalism, abstract shapes and all things beige. He’s just finished a kitchen and garden renovation, and has eyes set on a bathroom makeover for 2022.  

With contributions from