My 3 favourite colour combinations in our home – they create rooms that feel lived in rather than decorated

The best schemes aren't necessarily the most obvious ones

Neutral dining banquette corner with red and white striped seating upholstery
(Image credit: Lara Winter)

Home decorator Lara Winter is one of Ideal Home's Open House contributors, sharing her thoughts on revamping a 200 year old cottage to make it right for modern family life. See the rest of her articles here.

I am often asked how I choose colours for our cottage.

The honest answer is that there is no grand plan.

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I wish I could tell you I have a sophisticated colour strategy involving mood boards and design theory. In reality, most decisions involve me staring at paint swatches, making tea and hoping for the best.

Yet somehow, over the years, a few colour combinations have emerged that I come back to again and again.

The colour combination that gets the most compliments

Corner kitchen banquette area with striped upholstery, around oval wooden table and topped with pendant lamp shade

(Image credit: Lara Winter)

The first is in our dining nook. The walls are painted in a soft sandy beige, while the shelving is a deep firebrick red.

If you had shown me those two colours side by side ten years ago, I probably would have chosen one and rejected the other. Now I can't imagine the room without both.

The beige keeps things light and relaxed, while the red stops it drifting into boring territory. It feels warm, welcoming and slightly unexpected. Like the decorating equivalent of someone sensible wearing bright red lipstick.

It's probably the colour combination that gets the most compliments when people visit.

The ceiling colour that sounded like a terrible idea

Home office with vintage wooden desk underneath sloped ceilings painted pink with row of skylights

(Image credit: Lara Winter)

My office contains another favourite pairing. The walls are Setting Plaster by Farrow & Ball, while the ceiling and door are painted in Red Earth.

I know what you're thinking. Painting a ceiling a darker colour sounds slightly unhinged.

I thought so too.

But the room has high ceilings and roof windows, so instead of making the space feel smaller, the darker ceiling somehow makes it feel more intentional. The soft pink plaster tones on the walls feel creative and uplifting, while the richer terracotta overhead adds depth and warmth.

It's the room where I write, plan projects and occasionally stare out of the window pretending I'm working. The colours seem to understand all three activities equally well.

The cosiest room in the house

Blue boy's bedroom with twin bed, tartan window blind and wooden furniture

(Image credit: Lara Winter)

Then there is my son's bedroom. The walls are painted in Woad by Little Greene, a deep blue that immediately makes the room feel cosy. The ceiling is a much lighter blue, which helps lift the space and stops it feeling too serious. The wardrobe is painted in the same firebrick red that appears in our dining area.

I have noticed that children often end up with the best rooms. There is less overthinking. The room isn't trying to impress anyone. It simply feels calm, comfortable and safe. Exactly what a bedroom should be.

Looking around our home, I have realised that my favourite colour combinations all have something in common. None of them are particularly trendy. None of them were chosen because a design expert recommended them. And none of them looked especially exciting as tiny paint samples.

But together they create rooms that feel lived in rather than decorated.

Perhaps that is why I love them.

A soft beige needs a confident red beside it. A gentle pink becomes more interesting next to earthy terracotta. A deep blue feels even cosier with a lighter blue ceiling above it.

The best colour combinations aren't necessarily the most obvious ones. They're the ones that make you happy every time you walk into the room, even years after you've finished painting it.

Lara Winter
Content Creator

Lara is originally from Germany, where she studied Special Educational Needs before moving to England in 2016. She now runs the instagram account What A View Cottage which has over 240,000 followers, who tune in to be inspired by her modern take on rustic style.

Lara has always had a creative streak and the urge to experiment with colours and different layouts made her rearrange the furniture of her childhood bedroom constantly. These days she lives with her husband, their two sons and their fluffy, ginger cat Gizmo in a modern cottage in Wiltshire. She loves to create cosy, lived in spaces with lots of texture and the use of colour. Her specialty is to give rooms that cottage feel with a modern and sometimes unexpected twist and she's not afraid to mix interior styles.