this seems like a good spacing, assuming our metal panels are significantly wider (so they don't look like they're meant to be the same scale)
Q
another example of the wood finish look we'd like to do, but don't know what it is
a little narrower than we'd like, but the right look
this is approximately the wood finish (but vertical) that we're looking for
looks fairly similar in terms of color/material set as we'd like to do, albeit with less metal coverage on ours
really like this particular metal, just subtly distressed and in general a homogeneous color
looks similar to our desired number of exterior finishes, but wouldn't choose these particular materials
like the finishes on this house inside and out but would probably prefer to do interior walls white than exposed wood
like this wood tone, pale but slightly warm
another near ideal set of materials: dark metal, white/pale stone, light neutral wood
like this colorway of dark/cool metal, neutral stone and pale neutral wood
Same as previous photo comment
This looks like the color pairing were going for, sans a stone segment
Good wood pair
Good finish combo
Maybe the best possible pale wood color so far
Possible wood pairing (but swap to floor/roof dark and beams/trim pale)
Possible wood finish
Good neutral pale wood finish
Possible exterior color scheme
stone (in a lighter color) could also be nice but maybe isn't top choice for entire exterior
like distressed metal + pale stucco combo
like materials texture and also bright colors (wood + metal)
like wood + concrete combo
like the color and texture of combination here, rusted paneled metal and concrete/stucco
like the combo of stone and metal
too busy
like the neutral shades and simple combo of 2-3 finishes (seems like metal, wood, concrete)
too polished and glossy
like wood + metal combo, and use of just a couple of exterior finishes
like concrete and limestone, wood finish is a little warm though
like wood panel on roof underside but would make it a cooler tone
this seems like a good spacing, assuming our metal panels are significantly wider (so they don't look like they're meant to be the same scale)
Q