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Mid Century Modern White Exterior

Mark
hace 4 años
última modificación:hace 4 años

We've got a 1952 Florida mid century ranch that we want to take towards the mid century modern end of design. The front façade faces north and the roof color is super dark grey/black. Yes, we're going to paint over the brick and we do not want a chalky limestone wash.

I've done a few homes in BM's White Dove and although it looks great, it does show a tad too much yellow at times. So, we're looking for a white with little to no perceptible yellow undertones that's still on the warm side.

We painted a small area in SW Snowbound. It's a truer white with just a smidgen of yellow so it's the current top choice and we're looking at a satin sheen.

Just for grins, we put some BM Chantilly Lace on a small area and I was surprised how much I liked it. It's almost the color of the windows. It appears elegant and not too cold, but worried doing the whole house may in fact look a bit cold.

I'd appreciate any tips or thoughts.


Comentarios (23)

  • crystalpea
    hace 4 años

    Will the trim, gutters and garage be white as well?

    Mark agradeció a crystalpea
  • PRO
    BeverlyFLADeziner
    hace 4 años

    To appreciate the white, you need either landscaping or a contrasting paint accent.






    Mark agradeció a BeverlyFLADeziner
  • PRO
    BeverlyFLADeziner
    hace 4 años




    Mark agradeció a BeverlyFLADeziner
  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    Great comments. We've painted the fascia in Iron Mountain.

    We're getting new gutters that are almost the same color. If they don't look right, we'll paint them in Iron Mountain. We'll add rain chains.

    The garage will have a pergola and we'll paint it, and the garage door, in Iron Mountain.

  • PRO
    Beth H. :
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    the white and black trim are great, but adding some horizontal wood siding really makes it look modern.

    **horrible trying to get photos to load!*



    btw, look at Romabio masonry paint. it's a solid coat. but still lets your brick breathe and has low maintenance.


    if you like Chantilly, do that one. it's a cooler white with slight minty undertones to it. if you like SW, then try their pure white, or just use the white right out of the can. don't tint it.






    Mark agradeció a Beth H. :
  • Stephanie Yudelson
    hace 4 años

    Have you looked at BM simply white? It’s whiter than white dove but is still slightly warm. It’s one of my favorite whites.

    Mark agradeció a Stephanie Yudelson
  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    BeverlyFLADeziner, You hit the white I want on the head with picture 2 on your first post, picture 3 looks pretty good too. Picture 1 on your second post looks great, but may be a bit too warm. Do you know what those colors are?

    I agree with you on the landscaping. I've got a landscape designer friend who has designed a plan. We just have to execute it. That will be AFTER we paint the brick.

  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    Patricia, the windows were already replaced when we bought it. I don't like the grids either, but gonna leave them for now. We have actually painted vinyl windows before with great success, but they were full view. These have the grids sandwiched between the two panes.

    The picture I posted was before we upgraded the front door to a MCM version. Home Depot is finally selling nice looking front doors. I had to order it because the only thing they have in stock are colonial and those horribly overused Victorian oval front doors.

  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    Beth, those pictures look great, they're good inspiration. I am liking the truer whites now, but don't want this north facing house to look cold.

    I have a very talented designer friend. When he has time for me, he's encouraging me to paint the brick a slightly off white but paint the board below the soffit and the trim around the window in a white that matches the windows. The Chantilly Lace is the best match for those areas.

  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    Stephanie, Yes, I've been thinking about BM Simply White quite a bit.

    You know, we can't trust our cell phones or our monitors to display correctly, they all tweak the actual colors, but Simply White seems to be like White Dove. That is, sometimes it looks like a great white while other times that yellow shows itself.

    The whole inside of this house is painted White Dove, most of the walls, ceiling, and trim. You say Simply White has less yellow than White Dove, that's good.

    Even with SW Snowbound there's a touch of yellow although some still label it a cooler color.

    I use BM on all my interiors but prefer to use Sherwin Williams on the exterior because I've used it for thirty years with great success in a tough Florida environment. But you got me thinking about Simply White again. It's kind of foolproof.

    Who knew picking out whites would be this hard?

  • PRO
    Celery. Visualization, Rendering images
    hace 4 años

    I would go with no sheen , just flat for exterior,

    Mark agradeció a Celery. Visualization, Rendering images
  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    Great advice. I always try to use as little sheen as possible. Someone "upgraded" the original plain slab interior doors in this house to those six-panel colonial doors complete with unnecessary ornamentation and fake woodgrain - arghh!. I toned those puppies down with just an eggshell/pearl sheen white dove instead of semi-gloss. The woodgrain looks less fake.

    On the last brick cottage renovation we did, we used low luster, which is one up from flat in the BM exterior line. It looked pretty good, certainly not shiny. I was thinking satin on this one, but if I do BM Simply White, I'll do the low luster again. Thanks. I was kind of on the fence on that one thinking a modern home might need a touch more sheen.

  • PRO
    Lauren Coburn LLC
    hace 4 años

    Hello! You could try BM Super White. It’s a pretty bright white but depends on lighting, no Yellow.

    Mark agradeció a Lauren Coburn LLC
  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    Saw that on the walls of an IKEA display and it was clean and pure. Its probably BMs equivalent to SW Chantilly Lace.

  • groveraxle
    hace 4 años

    Whatever white you choose for the brick, paint the downspouts the same. Do not paint the downspouts the iron mountain to match your gutters and fascia.


    It would be helpful if you gave us a current photo of the house.

    Mark agradeció a groveraxle
  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    Agree one hundred percent, there is nothing to feature about a normal downspout. They should fade away into the brick.

    We're doing four downspouts actually. The two outer ones are just normal aluminum, will be whatever white color and will go down to the ground.

    The two inner ones on either side of the front porch will be black rain chains and will be anchored into large pots.

  • katinparadise
    hace 4 años

    following

    Mark agradeció a katinparadise
  • PRO
    JudyG Designs
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    Facing North, a white, mid-century modern:

    B.M Mirage White




    Mark agradeció a JudyG Designs
  • PRO
    Lori A. Sawaya
    hace 4 años

    The last thing I consider especially for exteriors is which direction the front door/windows faces. Because the light is constantly changing throughout the day and the year - it's a point of criteria that literally changes by the second.


    I understand your attraction to the cleaner whites in terms of chips and samples.


    What you need to try to anticipate is what happens to white on a bigger scale and in sunlight. Just because the house faces north, doesn't mean it's on the dark side of the moon.


    Sunlight - from all directions - strips chromaticity or colorfulness. So that "clean" white that looks good on samples and chips ends up looking rather arctic.


    Simply White is a really good suggestion because it has a little bit of chroma/colorfulness and there's a chance it will "wash out" and look just right once installed.


    As a general rule, you can always go a little darker and a little more colorful on exteriors than you think you can because, again, sunlight will knock back the intensity.

    Mark agradeció a Lori A. Sawaya
  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años
    Última modificación: hace 4 años

    I think you hit on something Lori. There's a huge house down the street with white painted brick paired with steep black rooflines that's too cool to me for this house. It's facing south and gets a lot of sun.

    When I look closely at the color on an individual brick, it looks fine, but there is soooo much brick that overall it looks starker than I want.

    By the way, there is a new modern farmhouse nearby in SW alabaster that looks very nice but it's not quite white enough for a modern home to me.

    Still clinging to BM Simply White with SW Snowbound in the back of my mind. I test next week.

  • Mark
    Autor original
    hace 4 años

    Wow JudyG, BM Gray Mirage is a "can't lose" color by Candice Olson. I have a ton of respect for her so i'm sure it would look great. I also see its described as a misty gray green. Right or wrong, I just see white for the exterior of this house, but gonna keep that color in the back of my mind for furniture etc. Thanks!

  • PRO
    Lori A. Sawaya
    hace 4 años

    When I look closely at the color on an individual brick, it looks fine, but there is soooo much brick that overall it looks starker than I want.


    That is exactly what I'm talking about.

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