exterior white paint colours

At the risk of stating the obvious, it’s hard to find the best paint color for your house’s exterior. White is a classic, but choose the wrong shade and you’ll end up with a very expensive mistake. We wanted to take the guesswork out of choosing the best white paint for your house, so we asked the architect and designer members of our Professional Directory to share their vetted shades of exterior white paint. They’ve painted countless houses over the years, and know what works. Here, they generously share their 10 favorites. What’s your go-to shade of white paint? Tell us in the comments below. Swatch photographs by Katie Newburn for Gardenista. Above: Top row, left to right: Benjamin Moore Brilliant White; Benjamin Moore Simply White; Farrow & Ball All White; Benjamin Moore White Heron. Bottom row: Sherwin-Williams Pure White; Benjamin Moore Swiss Coffee; Benjamin Moore Linen White; Porter Paints Atrium White; and Benjamin Moore Cloud White. Above: On this house in Connecticut, Brooklyn-based O’neill Rose Architects used low-luster Benjamin Moore Brilliant White, which principal Devin O’Neill calls “a standard that always looks good.”
The firm worked with Donald Kaufman on the palette for the house, and chose Donald Kaufman Color DKC-44 in semi-gloss for the porch and ceiling.decorate your room kit Above: Interior designer Meg Joannides of MLK Studio in LA recently completed this Brentwood Park home. best and cheapest exterior paintOn the exterior, she used Sherwin-Williams Pure White, a true white that barely hints toward warm. decorate christmas tree 2013The charcoal gray shutters are painted in Benjamin Moore Onyx. Above: Architect Tim Barber chose Benjamin Moore Swiss Coffee for this new house in Santa Monica. The color is also a favorite of SF Bay Area–based designer Nicole Hollis. Above: Donald Billinkoff of Billinkoff Architecture in NYC rarely uses any other white than Benjamin Moore White Heron.
Says Billinkoff, “In bright light it is warm and in low light it is bright.” Above: NYC-based 2Michaels worked with midcentury antiques dealer Larry Weinberg in choosing Benjamin Moore Simply White for this outdoor room on Martha’s Vineyard. Interior designer Kriste Michelini also recommends this shade. Above: LA-based DISC Interiors painted the exterior of this Loz Feliz home in Crystal Haze from Dunn-Edwards. This shade has the deepest tan inflection of the paints recommended here. Above: SF Bay Area designer Nicole Hollis chose Farrow & Ball All White as her pick–the whitest white of our recommendations. In this image from Farrow & Ball, the door and metalwork are painted in Pitch Black. Above: Nashville architect Marcus DiPietro chose PPG Porter Paints Atrium White for the exterior of this modern, Japanese-influenced home in Oak Hill, Tennessee. Next to Linen White (below), Atrium White is the second warmest of the bunch. Above: NYC-based Steven Harris Architects painted this Upper West Side townhouse in Benjamin Moore’s Cloud White.
Photograph by Elizabeth Felicella. Above: SF Bay Area-based landscape architecture firm Pedersen Associates admires Benjamin Moore’s Linen White, shown here on a house in Mill Valley. Says principal Pete Pedersen, “Here in Northern California, the quality of light is such that you need to take a little off of the whites to keep from too much reflective glare.” Linen White is the warmest of the 10 whites shown here. Looking for a shade of white to paint an indoor room? See 10 Easy Pieces: Architects’ White Paint Picks. We also consulted architects for their picks for exterior shades of gray and black. This is an update of a post originally published September 11, 2013. ,  ,  ,  ,  ,  ,  ,Ultra Pure White Semi-Gloss Enamel Exterior Paint Set your store to see localavailabilityUltra Pure White Satin Enamel Exterior PaintUltra Pure White Flat Exterior Paint #MQ3-36 Translucent Silk Paint #MQ3-20 Whipped Mint Paint #MQ3-28 Rock Crystal Paint
#MQ3-31 Dutch White Paint #MQ3-13 Crisp Linen Paint#MQ3-34 Stolen Kiss Semi-Gloss Enamel Exterior Paint #MQ3-9 Loft Light Paint #MQ3-19 Misty Isle Paint #PPU8-16 Coliseum Marble Exterior Paint #MQ5-50 Opal Waters Paint #MQ3-25 Gray Shimmer Paint #MQ2-59 Silver City Paint #MQ3-45 Looking Glass Paint #MQ3-24 Celestial Light Paint#MQ3-57 Siberian Ice Semi-Gloss Enamel Exterior Paint #N510-3 Stargazer Exterior Paint #MQ3-55 White Lie Paint #MQ2-8 Irish Cream Paint #MQ3-53 Sky Light View Paint #MQ3-4 Quiet on the Set PaintFreshly back from the Architectural Digest Home Design Show and now I have a fever-aches? Oh well… in bed with my laptop. Did you see the new sign up form at the top of the page? There’s a terrific report filled with my best advice for choosing paint colors. If you’re already a subscriber, then you’ve received the report and if not, then please subscribe and you’ll be privy to it as well.
And it’s not that I blame you one bit. Did you know that Benjamin Moore makes some 150 different shades of WHITE? To add to the confusion, we have a wall color and a ceiling color. Oh, and a floor color. That counts because the color might reflect on your walls and ceiling to some extent. On top of that, we have lighting. We have trees sometimes; cloudy days and sunny days. We have different hours of the day and then there’s night.I have seen this over and over and over. I had this situation in my old home. I painted the walls and trim [crown, wainscoting, baseboard] in my living room ONE COLOR. It was Pratt and Lambert Ancestral and I loved it. The crown moulding always looked ever so slightly pink. No where else did it look like that. There was no pink in the room. And there is NO pink in this paint color. As a matter of fact, the colors underneath Ancestral are green! It didn’t bother me, in fact, it was kind of interesting and it wasn’t on every wall. Other oddities I’ve found is off-white paint that looks stark white.
Or cream paint that looks positively peach. This is why white is the most difficult color. It’s highly reflective and therefore can take on seemingly bizarre characteristics which are beyond our control. And that’s the operative word. We believe that it’s our right to control how our colors are going to behave and that’s where I think the crux of the issue stems from. We can’t control it anymore than we can control the movement of the sun. Therefore, in the interest of getting on with more important things in life, like our families, friends, jobs and blog writing, I’m going to tell you one thing. [and for that matter, all of your paint colors]But what if the cream looks yellow or the white looks cold or gray? Well, it’s probably not going to because I’m going to narrow down the 150 to the only 6 white paint trim colors you’ll ever needBecause I have found that these six colors cover the gamut and are generally reliable. Still, you must test, test, test as always!
And test the paint in the can to make sure that everyone understood what to order and mixed it correctly! you don’t have to do this, but if possible, it’ll make your life easier this is not an absolute, but a perfectly valid choice. My old living room ceiling was a beautiful pale aqua called pistachio. But, Laurel, what if I want the moulding to pop and I want contrast between the wall and the moulding? Right… cause you’re going for that “wow factor?” It can be plenty wow if painted the same color. Most of my clients don’t want it to be the same color and I specify two different colors for walls and trim. Here are some lovely examples of rooms where ceiling, trims and wall are the same color or almost the same. Have you ever seen such beautiful millwork? Don’t you just love those closet doors? Who was it who said that an all white kitchen is so cold? This was a winner at the Atlanta Homes and Lifestyles Kitchen of the Year. It appears that the range surround is painted a deeper color.
I say “appears” because I have seen situations where something looks like this and it’s the SAME color! I was a bit upset about this because I know that this is Loi’s home, however, I could not find one photo on the internet that credited him. It drives me nuts when someone credits photos to pinterest! White Dove OC-17 – the universal donor of paints. It almost always looks great. It is a white with a touch of cream and a touch of gray without being dirty– usually. Cloud White 967– a touch brighter with a very slight taupe undertone, this is a great non-yellow white, but still warm Simply White OC-117 – a very clean white, but might be too bright for darker colors Cotton Balls OC-122 – another universal donor. Very much like white dove but virtually no gray Linen White 912 – It’s usually not my first choice for walls unless the space has good lighting. But this is often an excellent choice for deeper colors like browns and golds. Fair warning, I did recently see this looking peach which I had never seen before.
Ivory White 925 – Another lovely cream that’s a bit brighter than linen white Are there other great colors? Yes, of course, but I’m trying to simplify your life. With some of the colors, the difference is so minute anyway. If you want to see the entire list of wonderful whites, here is a list of 20 great shades of white paint. I read recently that there is no such thing as “plain white” from Benjamin Moore, but that is not true. I have a can of it because that was what was used in my apartment for the trim and ceilings before I bought it. For the ceiling it’s White N215 01. [that’s the flat formulation] It has different numbers for different formulations. Most of the time it is fine, but sometimes in the living room reads as being too white. I don’t really ever notice it however. In the bathroom, I really like it with my pale gray, Shoreline walls. I didn’t put it on the list because over-all, I like simply white better. However, plain old white is often an excellent choice for gray colors.