
Green is the colour we return to without realising it.
It is the colour of paths worn soft by time, of moss on old stone, of landscapes that don’t ask anything of us.
There’s a reason rooms washed in green feel easier to breathe in.
Historically, green has always belonged to domestic spaces.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, deep greens appeared in libraries, studies, drawing rooms, and private salons. These were rooms designed for reading, thinking, conversation, and long evenings. Green signalled refuge from the outside world, a soft enclosure.
Even today, many old houses retain traces of green beneath layers of paint.
Unlike botanical prints, green brings nature indoors without copying it. It echoes the feeling of being outdoors.
This is why green works so well in homes meant to be lived in slowly. It feels grown.
How to use green in your space
The key is restraint.
Soft sage, moss, olive, and muted celadon create calm without heaviness. These shades sit comfortably with wood, linen, stone, and antique finishes such as this glorious mahogany desk (https://go.shopmy.us/p-36130962).
A room should feel like it grew into its colour, not that the colour arrived all at once.