The Color Palettes That Will Make Your Home Look Outdated

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When you move into a home, more often than not you'll be inheriting a few (or more) decor flaws and outdated paint jobs from the previous homeowners. While some of these can be fixed -- like swapping out that faux Tiffany lamp for a more modern pendant -- others can prove to be a little more challenging to switch out. And by challenging we're referring to garishly-hued stucco walls, old wallpaper from the 1980s that's still intact and full-on pink bathrooms.

Although these outdated color and decor choices are not complete deal breakers in a home, a pink bathroom or a burnt umber kitchen may be making your home look, well...old and outdated. So, we decided to take a closer look at major colors and decor that dominated the home during the '50s-'80s to get a sense of how 'aging' a look can be. Check out our break down of the eras below.



Flickr photo by The U.S. National Archives


The Decade: 1950s
The Color: Baby pink
The Look: Pink was all the rage during this golden era. And all the thanks may go to Mamie Eisenhower, who gave rise to the pink trend, which even influenced Hollywood actress Jayne Mansfield's very own pink palace. And the soft pink wasn't just confined to the bathroom, kitchens eventually caught a bit of that blush as well.
Why It's Dated: There's nothing wrong with a pink palette, but pink bathroom fixtures like toilets aren't commonly sold anymore, so they will always look like they belong in Grandma's house. And while we love Grandma, we don't have to decorate like her.
How To Make It Work: If you can't replace your pink toilet, offset the color with a silvery accents and (if you can) paint the walls in gray. The stark contrast will turn the pink color into an accent, rather than a focal point. Or, if you choose to embrace the '50s look, try bringing in vintage accessories like apothecary bottles and a silver mirror.

The Decade: 1960s
The Colors: Dusty 'Historic' Hues
The Look: While the '60s is associated with mod design, the majority of homes during this decade took on a more early-American approach to decor. There was lots of wood paneling (especially faux), plaids and mustard/periwinkle/forest green hues with grayish undertones. Think: Don and Betty Draper's home. ( Or, Check out these '60s rooms.)
Why It's Dated: These dusty colors just simply make a room look weathered and time-worn.
How To Make It Work: Many homes still retain this '60s palette, whether it's on the wallpaper or the carpet. However, that doesn't mean you have to get rid of it. Try bringing in vintage-style seating and side tables to complement the muted palette, as seen in this living room. Or, give the room a bright update with boldly colored pillows, which will help take the "dinginess" out of these muted hues.

The Decade: 1970s
The Colors: Avocado, Burnt Umber
The Look: There was no shortage of avocado stoves and fridges and burnt umber kitchens during the '70s. Why? After the '60s, people wanted to take a breather and retreat back to more earthy, meditative tones.
Why It's Dated: Although appliance manufacturers are bringing back retro colors for stoves, ovens and fridges, the original models are no longer in production and they look misplaced more often than not. See also: The Brady Bunch.
How To Make It Work: One way to make avocado work in the modern kitchen is actually to paint your shelves the color. Offset the green by pairing it with a darker color such as the sleek slate tiles in that apartment or paint the surrouding walls in black and white, which will give it a more contemporary look. And instead of going umber on the walls, update your shelves with a dark umber for a fresh, polished feel.

The Decade: 1980s
The Colors: Faux Tuscan white, dark brown, wicker
The Look: The countryside-inspired look really took off in this decade with kitchens that had tile counters and a tinge of Tuscany, or a lot, like this kitchen.
Why It's Dated: While spaces inspired by the country homes can have a timeless look and feel to them, it's easy to go overboard with the colors and decor. Then it becomes faux-Tuscan, which can look stuffy and outdated. Or, like an Olive Garden restaurant.
How To Make It Work: If you're going for a Tuscan-style kitchen, it's important to not make it feel crowded both visually and physically. Try going with a lighter paint color for the cabinets, like the sage in this kitchen. This will especially brighten and open up a small kitchen. For a bolder approach, you can also go with yellow walls for a sunny backdrop or paint just the backsplash under the cabinets for a more subtle effect.


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12:12 PM on 03/30/2012
This writer doesn't know what they're talking about. There are entire blogs dedicated to "saving the pink bathrooms". I'm looking for a home right now, specifically 1960's with pink bathrooms, or something else still intact from that era. If it's been updated with granite or some other modern atrocity, I pass on it.
10:26 AM on 02/23/2012
Years ago, my cousin wanted me to see this house that was on a side street several blocks from her in Kapaa. The owner had a falling out with the neighbors. The house had been painted pumpkin orange with black on all of the window trim and doors. It looked like a giant Halloween pumpkin! It stayed that way for several years.

It's has been changed! The loss of one big pumpkin happened. It is now an "in" color!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hman570
06:07 AM on 02/23/2012
Fads that is what Americans are about, we swing witch ever the way the wind blows. Now a days it is Stainless Steel, or what they call Stainless Steel today. It may look nice but very hard to keep clean if you have small ones. Many people are finding out that it is not all that it is cracked up to be. Still many people are going back to the basics in their kitchens and bathrooms. It is just the choices you have to make when you go shopping for new fixtures in the stores today. We are buying what the buyers for Lowes, Home Depot, Sears and the rest of them. The buyers of today are going back to the footed Tubs, basins with stands and if you go for the basin and stand the stands are something out of the turn of the centry? Yuck. I guess you can't account for peoples taste.
12:48 AM on 02/23/2012
My childhood home was recently for sale and I went to the open house. I was shocked to see that the refrigerator and oven were the same ones that were there when we moved out over 20 years ago! They were avocado green when we had lived there, but they had been painted white! We had lived there from 1973-1989. I can't believe they still work!
01:50 AM on 02/23/2012
That's because they were made in the USA, and made with quality. Appliances from the 50's, 60's, and 70's lasted forever. But then, manufacturers figured out that they weren't selling as many as they wanted to sell, so they started cheapening the workmanship, using thinner metal, cheaper wiring, etc. And now, we live in a throw away world where the norm is "replace" instead of "repair". Can't hardly find a furniture upholsterer anymore because the junk they sell for furniture isn't worth buying the fabric to reupholster it, even if you could find someone who still knew how to upholster anything. Then, the factories decided it would be more profitable to build those cheap things out of the country, where they didn't have to pay benefits, and live up to regulations. The present generation of people have no idea what a well-built appliance or piece of furniture is, let alone a chrome bumper on a car. That's because they've never had one.
03:51 AM on 02/23/2012
Planned obsolescence. The manufacturers, plan for them to only last so long. Now days, you pay someone to come out and tell you that the part necessary to fix your appliance costs twice as much as buying a new one. My mom bought a Maytag washer and dryer because everyone told her that they last forever. Well, it was the worst she had ever bought and the washer only lasted 2 years. They just don't build quality anymore.

People are so worried about plastic bottles ruining the environment. Well, they're easy to recycle. What about all the appliances, furniture, etc., that are all going into land fills. how about saving the environment by building things to last again. It's not like we don't know how.

I know that we had both the oven and refrigerator were both repaired more than once.

I want to learn how to re-finish furniture because I don't like the stuff they sell that isn't even real wood.
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jmpac1
12:02 AM on 02/23/2012
This was one useless article.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KenValpojd
10:57 PM on 02/22/2012
There is still no combination that looks better than forest green and dark wood.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ystorm
HAND UP not HAND OUT!!!
10:37 PM on 02/22/2012
I don't like these people telling me that certain colors are 'dated.' Maybe they have no use for them but yanno, some of us actually enjoy things that are not bleeding edge id. io. tic.
10:53 PM on 02/22/2012
This was EXACTLY my thought! If I like it, it's going to be. It's my house. I'm not going to follow some random person's ideas.
11:18 PM on 02/22/2012
Thanks! Use the colors you like, not what is "in." I really don't want to meet these people who make the decision as to what clothes, what cars and want colors. Sounds like a branch of the government!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jmpac1
12:06 AM on 02/23/2012
Right. What happened to "everything old is new again?"
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rockshock
10:05 PM on 02/22/2012
I thought your description of decade colors was from the perspective of New York and New England??? I was a little kid during the sixties who grew into a teen. I was delighted when the Sears Roebuck catalog started showing something beside white appliances. Pink, light blue, a little light green, and daffodil yellow were the choices I first remember. Later coppertone brown, which I think is what you meant by umber. And in the 70s yes, lots of avocado green, but sometimes it became a very tasteful avocado gold metallic. And antique gold was really in, in the 70s, my mother's high end Monkey Ward double oven, with 'brain' on a big burner, and very tasteful smoked silver, charcoal glass door for the top oven. For the 80s, Radar range, Amana microwave ovens were a big addition, and gosh, really huge 35inch Mitsubishi color stereo television, listing at a rowdy $3500, with lots of really elegant Scandanavian furniture, where just like Frank Lloyd Wright, in the 30s, 40s, and 50s, EVERYTHING WAS ABSOLUTELY INTEGRATED, SMOOTH AND BLENDED ABSOLUTELY SEAMLESSLY WITH EVERYTHING ELSE, except of course, big hair, Nancy Reagan's plastered on smile, and people dying of AIDs everywhere. Hee haw.
09:05 PM on 02/22/2012
No color is wrong and no color is dated it's how its used that makes the difference, as well as where it's used.

Obviously the writer has forgotten that there is a whole new decorating concept called retro-chic, or else they are talking about badly put together colors and combinations like the bathroom of our hosue when we moved in in 1971 with green and black tiles that went halfway up 3 walls and all the way up the wall to the ceiling behind the tub/shower where the non tiled wall portions and ceiling were pink. Badly done.

The colors themselves though, if used differently would still be chic today just not done that way not pink plus black plus green all together for example (and probably not as bathroom colors-except maybe the pink, because color research has shown that pink and peach will make you look healthier and fresher when used in dressing rooms and bathrooms-and that greens even avocado and mint-50s types can both calm and depending on the shade stimulate appetite-doubt it? read those books on color psychology like I did)

I agree somewhat with the article but I take umbridge with the ideas that colors themselves can be bad or outdated when its simply a matter of how they are used and where that makes the difference between dated/ugly and tasteful retro-chic.
08:25 PM on 02/22/2012
Everything in my house has an amber tint to it because I smoke, I know it's bad.
07:39 PM on 02/22/2012
What's the difference between "dated" and "retro"?
09:12 PM on 02/22/2012
I think dated = badly done or done in a totally cliched way like you did everythink exactly like that 1951 magazine showed or you combined the colors in a bizzarre or horrid way that totally typifies that era but that noone currently does in that way
07:38 PM on 02/22/2012
I just painted my bathroom "dusty olive" and LOVE it!
07:01 PM on 02/22/2012
I click on "These two colors are very bad ideas"....I get something else HuffPost always does this! Why do I still click?????? I think this is the LAST time.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:01 PM on 02/22/2012
Wow, I just built a second bathroom and was thinking about going 50s retro with the tile. You know aqua, pink, light green, that sort of thing. Now I know I should go ahead with it. The necessaries will all be white porcelain.
07:52 PM on 02/22/2012
My son bought a beautiful 3BR house in OKC a couple of years ago. It has wood floors throughout and the baths (2) are in te old scool tiole. the houe was built in the 50's. The bath tiles are octagonal and there is a row of beautiful decorative tiles all the way around. One is mint green: the other is blue. They are getting new windows and doors all the way around and heave painted the interior more modern colors. But the house is the relaxation capitol of the world for them. They love the open area in the cdenter of the house where they have installed an office. They can still watch the kids and not have the computers int the living room, den, or bedroom. You can't beat the versatility of a 50's vintage home. They were meant for families.
06:26 PM on 02/22/2012
Three words: Red FLOCKED wallpaper.

A bathroom in a 1960-70's house we lived in had it on every wall - with a gold foil background. It was horrid.

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