How Colour Shapes Our Everyday Experience of Space
Colour is often one of the first things we notice in an interior, yet it is rarely understood for the profound role it plays in shaping how a space feels to live within.
Beyond aesthetics, colour influences mood, energy levels, perception of space, and emotional response. It works quietly in the background of our daily lives, affecting how we wake, focus, rest, and connect, often without us consciously realising why.
Colour as an Emotional and Psychological Language
From an environmental psychology perspective, colour functions as a form of non-verbal communication. It can calm or stimulate, ground or uplift, support focus or invite rest.
Soft, muted tones can create a sense of ease and containment, while deeper or warmer hues may evoke comfort, intimacy, or protection. Cooler palettes can feel expansive and light, while layered neutrals often provide a sense of stability and longevity.
What matters most is not the colour itself, but how it is experienced in context, alongside light, materiality, proportion, and the rhythms of daily life.