How to Select the Right Wedding Color Schemes?
Choosing a final color palette for your wedding day might be difficult just as finding the best wedding venue. For your big day, you want to make sure everything looks exactly how you planned it! Fortunately for you, we've compiled the most crucial guidelines for selecting the ideal color schemes for your wedding.
Take into account your skin tone.
Choose a hue that will complement your complexion. Certain colors appear better on certain skin tones. You want to look glowing, not washed out, on your special day. You don't want a color that picks up on your skin's unflattering undertones. Let's face it, we all know that certain hues make us sparkle and make us look renewed and bright when we wear them. Some colors, on the other hand, might completely drain the color from your face.
Your bridesmaids will most likely be dressed in the colors of your wedding theme, but even if you aren't, the colors are vital to choose with your complexion in mind.
Consider the time of year.
Consider the natural landscape during the time of your wedding, and you'll get some great ideas for wedding color schemes. Without being too dark, the ideal springtime wedding colors include some attractive pastels and neutrals. If you're having a fall wedding, warm oranges, purples, and pomegranate should be included into your decor. Emerald green, deep reds, and calm blues are beautiful winter colors. Consider a dazzling winter picture - wintery white or silver is also lovely. Warm gold, on the other hand, goes well with bright hues like pinks, yellows, and brilliant blues in the summer.
Do your homework.
If you have a color scheme in mind for your wedding, browse for photos of other weddings with similar color schemes to see how they might appear. Pinterest, as well as images of real weddings, are excellent resources.
Complementary hues should be used.
Examine a color wheel to ensure that the colors you've picked will work well together and complement one another. Choosing one dominating color and one complementary color is common (or one warm color and one cool color). A dominating color can be more vibrant, whilst a complementary hue can be more subdued. Using two vivid hues, such as fuchsia and teal, will make the room look too busy and will not photograph well. Consider tossing in a complementary hue, such as sea foam or maroon, to offer a pop of color and avoid your decor from being washed out or too boring if you want to use soft colors like blush, beige, or white throughout your wedding.
Take into account the location.
Make sure you wait until after you've booked your wedding venue to finalize your color scheme. A patterned carpet, wall art, or other decorations in the interior may clash with particular hues. You don't have to match your colors to your venue's design perfectly; all you have to do is make sure they blend in with the overall style and atmosphere. If you're being married at a seaside country club, light greens or blues might be nice, however if you're getting married in a rustic barn, black and yellow would not be as appropriate as, say, dusty rose and cream.
Your wedding day should be all you've imagined, and then some! Make sure the colors you chose for your wedding represent you and make you happy. It's your special day, so make it as unique as you are. And for the best wedding venue in Oklahoma, see us at The Plantation at Coal Creek.