Color Guide: How to Work With Chartreuse
As earthy or electric as you please, this yellow-green hue brings the zing or just freshness to homes from traditional to modern
It's a vivid, electric color. Happy, even. It's the inside of a perfect avocado, a bed of Scotch moss or the belly of a lovebird. Chartreuse is halfway between green and yellow — a yellowish green, a greenish yellow. But the spectrum within this color ranges from bright lime to light sulphur.
In its lighter, softer form chartreuse makes a great wall color for earthy, nature-inspired rooms. In its boldest, brightest form it is as eye catching as neon.
Chartreuse can be both earthy and electric. It looks wonderful with reds, oranges and blues, especially turquoise and cobalt. Bright chartreuse is a perfect foil for charcoal gray (think lichen on stone) and in modern design is often used as a pop against muted neutrals. It looks crisp and spring-y with bright white and vivid with purple.
It's very popular in modern design, but chartreuse can span the eras and does not need to be used sparingly. Go ahead and put it all over; it can take it. Do you want a baroque entryway with chartreuse walls and crystal chandeliers? Go for it.
As these photos show, chartreuse may be bold — flashy, even — but it is not limiting. In fact, it's an all-around great decorating color.
In its lighter, softer form chartreuse makes a great wall color for earthy, nature-inspired rooms. In its boldest, brightest form it is as eye catching as neon.
Chartreuse can be both earthy and electric. It looks wonderful with reds, oranges and blues, especially turquoise and cobalt. Bright chartreuse is a perfect foil for charcoal gray (think lichen on stone) and in modern design is often used as a pop against muted neutrals. It looks crisp and spring-y with bright white and vivid with purple.
It's very popular in modern design, but chartreuse can span the eras and does not need to be used sparingly. Go ahead and put it all over; it can take it. Do you want a baroque entryway with chartreuse walls and crystal chandeliers? Go for it.
As these photos show, chartreuse may be bold — flashy, even — but it is not limiting. In fact, it's an all-around great decorating color.
In a sleek, modern entryway a chartreuse door draws the eye.
Door color: C2 paint in Al Green
Tour this updated Victorian in San Francisco
Door color: C2 paint in Al Green
Tour this updated Victorian in San Francisco
A splash of chartreuse breaks up the neutrals in this room but goes perfectly with the muted earth tones.
Chartreuse accent wall: Colored chalkboard paint from Hudson Paint
Chartreuse accent wall: Colored chalkboard paint from Hudson Paint
Chartreuse on a wall in a very traditional dining room. It's not outrageous, but it certainly isn't stuffy, either. And see how beautiful it looks with the blues and purples here?
A lighter, more muted chartreuse works like a neutral but with more pizazz. And the warm, light wood just glows next to it.
See more of this renovated ranch house
See more of this renovated ranch house
I love this intricately patterned chartreuse wallpaper. It’s elegant and glamorous, and it makes a huge splash in this small space.
Wallpaper: Farrow and Ball
Wallpaper: Farrow and Ball
A bright yellow chartreuse electrifies these adjoining rooms without much natural light. The greige on the separating wall is the perfect warm neutral here.
A very light yellow chartreuse fits in perfectly with this very traditional living room and looks great with the bright white trim.
A chartreuse ceiling gives this modern all-white room a yellow glow.
A chartreuse floor adds a mossy, outdoorsy feeling to this neutral kitchen.
Decorating With Chartreuse
This Togo sofa by Ligne Roset blends in so well with the browns, grays and whites in this room. It's bright, but it's not jarring.
This Togo sofa by Ligne Roset blends in so well with the browns, grays and whites in this room. It's bright, but it's not jarring.
Chartreuse makes such a nice accent color. And it's gorgeous with teal and white.
Bam! Bright and modern in a wild but traditional black, white and gray dining room. Nothing earthy here.
Green Panton Chairs: Vitra
Green Panton Chairs: Vitra
A bit of wow in a small, neutral bathroom.
More glamorous chartreuse wallpaper. It's '60s go-go meets Hollywood Regency.
A single chartreuse stool is a little ray of sunshine in this industrial kitchen. Modern but warm.
A modern icon in chartreuse paired with dove gray and bright white. Fresh and clean looking, like spring.
A chartreuse tile backsplash in a crisp, white kitchen.
Chartreuse armchairs help warm up this traditional living room.
Chartreuse Outside
Most chartreuse outdoors comes from the landscape. This foliage seems to glow.
Most chartreuse outdoors comes from the landscape. This foliage seems to glow.
Sempervivum with red tips.
These chartreuse plants were specifically chosen for their design chops. They shine against the muted colors in this backyard.
A yellow-chartreuse wall on a rooftop patio defines the space against the skyline.
Just a splash of chartreuse around the windows in this updated modern cottage in Texas. I absolutely love this bold exception to the gray and white rule.
This chartreuse exterior wall looks wonderful with the natural wood, and helps define the space so that it becomes another room rather than just an open space.
Chartreuse helping to define architecture.
This pool and hot tub are vividly defined by a chartreuse outline in an otherwise neutral palette.
Chartreuse looks beautiful with almost all the colors of the outdoors.
Serena & Lily Low-VOC Paint, Grass
Less vivid and much greener. This could almost be a neutral wall color.
Pale Avocado 2146-40 Paint
More golden but still a greenish golden. This would be a great wall color for a traditional room with bright white trim.
A bright green chartreuse makes these built-ins glow (notice how I didn't say "pop"). It's a traditional farmhouse on happy juice.
See more of this colorful house