Lush yet low-key, beautifully balanced Burwell green traces its color history to a mix of the pigments lamp black, verdigris, yellow ochre and white...
A deep, rich green with a touch of brown, this shade was created using popular 18th century pigments such as Prussian blue, yellow ochre and lamp black...
A deep green that suggests wisdom and maturity, this more masculine shade has velvety richness. It is part of Colonial Williamsburg's revival color palette...
Opulent Colonial verdigris takes its color cue from the patina of aged verdigris paint. A prominent shutter and door color after the Revolution, it is deep and decorative, suggesting Old World elegance...
Tracing its origin to the late 18th century paint color uncovered by paint analysts on the exterior of the Finnie House, this go-anywhere gray has a rich, traditional feeling...
Based on an 18th century interior paint color found by researchers in the Galt dining room, this fun and flattering shade has a graceful, vintage quality...
This striking teal traces its history to a reclaimed baluster from a demolished late 18th or early 19th century house that once stood near the Capitol...
This lush blue with a touch of green is based on a mid-18th century interior color found at Wetherburn's Tavern, one of the most thoroughly documented buildings in the HIstoric Area...
Opulent and a touch offbeat, this glamorous shade of blue, a part of Colonial Williamsburg's colonial revival color palette, adds a layer of attention-getting style to any space...
To create this sophisticated shade, researchers referenced 1770s descriptions and the inventory, orders and account books of Lord Botetourt for blue wallpaper at the Governor's Palace...
Known examples of 18th century paint guided the creation of Lafayette blue, a shade created by Colonial Williamsburg's Historic Resources staff using a hand-ground mix of period-authentic blue and white pigments...
This historically accurate color is based on known examples of 18th century blue paint. Gracious and genteel, its rich, deeply concentrated hue complements rooms filled with heirloom antiques...
Inspired by the rich dark blue created by the popular 18th century pigment Prussian blue, this striking shade mirrors the beauty of blue-and-white Chinese export porcelain popular in 18th century homes...
Inspired by a background and pattern color used in 18th century wallpaper, this light and lustrous shade of grayish blue has an almost iridescent shimmer...
A more moody blue, this velvety shade -- a mix of white, black and Prussian blue pigments -- is a darker version of the pearl suggested in 18th century painting manuals...