Home Interior: When Choosing Paint Colors Understanding LRV Can Help.
Written by Guest Contributor Lori Sawaya   

LRV - You may have noticed these three letters before; on the back of a paint color strip or noticed an entire column dedicated to them on the precious few square inches of space available on the index of paint fandecks. What do those letters stand for? What does the LRV number mean and how is it used?

It is rather simple and if you read on, you will learn that paying attention to a color’s LRV can prevent poor wall color selections by helping you determine and evaluate certain characteristics of a color before you even buy a sample.

What does it mean?

LRV is an acronym that stands for Light Reflectance Value. As mentioned, the LRV of a color can be found on the back of most color chips and on the index of all major brands’ fandecks. Value is often confused with the term intensity. Intensity deals with the brightness or dullness of a color, how clear or muted a color is. Value is an important term used in color and it speaks strictly to the lightness or darkness of a color.

What is it?

LRV is a measurement that tells you how much light a color reflects, and conversely how much it absorbs. LRV runs on a scale from 0% to 100%. Zero being absolute black and 100% being a perfectly reflective white. An absolute black or perfectly reflecting white do not exist in our everyday terms. The average blackest black has a LRV of approximately 5% and the whitest white is approximately 85%. Some yellows can measure up into the 80’s or 90’s as well.

Professionals use that number. How?

Color consultants, architects, and designers use LRV data in several stages of color planning and specifying. Several examples can be found in the workplace. Careful planning for proper visual ergonomics is paramount in color design for a variety of environments: from individual work surfaces to the outside walkways, ramps, and hand-railings and everything in between. Regarding sustainability issues, a wall color with a higher LRV can go a long way in supporting lighting plans by helping to propagate daylight into the space and reduce the standard number of lighting fixtures required to enable employees to efficiently and safely perform their tasks.

How can homeowners use LRV to choose paint colors?

Most important for the do-it-yourselfer at home, is to refer to color specifications for the variety of products used to enhance or cover the exterior. For example vinyl siding. Painting vinyl siding with a color that has too low of an LRV, that absorbs too much light and energy and thus retains too much heat, could result in warped siding. There are paint manufacturers that have developed special formulations for painting heat-sensitive exterior surfaces and they offer diverse color choices. However, if you do not use one of those specially formulated products, you are limited to a paint color that is within the same LRV range as the original color of the exterior product in order to prevent warping and voiding any warranties.

Moving to interior color planning, LRV provides a reference as to how light or dark a color could look and feel once up on all the walls in a room. Keeping in mind that LRV runs on a scale of 0% to 100%, 50% would be a mid-tone paint color. Fifty percent LRV is a commonly used guideline for residential interior wall colors.

Below the mid-point of 50%, and you know that the color will tend to be darker absorbing more light than it will reflect back into the room. Thus, an interior lighting plan that accounts for the darker paint color should be a priority.  Colors with LRV higher than 50% will be lighter and will reflect more light back into the room than is absorbed.

When sampling paint colors, paying attention to Light Reflectance Values as you try different hues, tints, tones and shades creates benchmarks that can assist you in arriving at color selections quickly and efficiently.

What are the precautions of relying on LRV for choosing paint colors?

It is true that LRV communicates a lot about a potential wall color, possibly provides even more of a sense of the color than those very small color chips - and we all know the issues with relying on just the small color chips.

LRV refers to the percentage of light reflected by the paint color regardless of how much light is present. The LRV number is a measurement, a piece of data and is one of the few things about a color that is a known consistent factor. No matter from what direction the natural light enters a room, no matter what reflection of color you get from the other elements in the room, no matter what other conditions exist that will affect the context in which the wall color is experienced, the LRV is the LRV. However…

LRV can be misleading when it comes to yellow. Yellow is one of the most reflective hues in the spectrum. In addition, the more area it covers it grows more intense exponentially. People err when choosing yellow more than any other color. They end up with a too bright Lemon Chiffon yellow that borders on needing eye protection to enter the room when they really were going for a softer, more muted Buttercream color. There is a difference between Light Reflectance Value and visual lightness albeit subtle. Therefore when choosing yellow wall colors, consideration of visual intensity – how bright or dull the color looks – would be a more prominent consideration than LRV.

Summing up LRV

LRV is a guideline. A relative point of reference in predicting how light or dark a color will look and feel once up on the walls. It is not a set standard by which to choose colors rather an indicator to help you make your best guess – and choosing wall colors is all about guessing.

No one can predict how a color will feel once it is up on all the walls. No matter who it is, designer, professional color designer, architect, or your next-door neighbor... they guess. The difference is some people are better guessers than others. What makes some people better paint color guessers than others is a matter of knowledge, taste, and experience. With your new knowledge and clearer understanding of LRV, you are one-step closer to expertly choosing paint colors that are pleasing and appropriate for the inherent lighting and chosen design style of interior spaces and best suited to exterior applications.

 


Lori Sawaya is principal of Color Strategies, Architectural Color Consultants in New York. Color Strategies (www.colorstrategies.net) provides guidance to contractors, homeowners, business owners and design professionals on a national level. Lori is available for color consultations and speaking engagements on the topic of color and our built environments. Her area of specialty is natural directional light and the affects it has on a roomÂ’s atmosphere.

 

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