Should I keep the walls natural walnut or should I stain all of the walls grey (like you see in the left corner)?
G
The color is a uniform grey stain, but applied carefully to allow the underlying woodgrain pattern to show through clearly.
Pls allow me to butt in. I used to be into home decorating quite a bit and knew more designer furnitures than audio.
It would be nice to bring out the wood texture of your grey side wall more (staining is better than painting imo) and have the back wall in contrasting shade of wood like the picture below. If your interior designer create for you some inlay or offset within the wooden wall it would also give the wall shading and sense of enevenness making the wall less boring. You will be making more points with the Lady Tinka.
@ddk. I ran into this picture and thought that the room, the tone go well with your Bionor and Flos suspension lamps.
Pls allow me to butt in. I used to be into home decorating quite a bit and knew more designer furnitures than audio.
It would be nice to bring out the wood texture of your grey side wall more (staining is better than painting imo) and have the back wall in contrasting shade of wood like the picture below. If your interior designer create for you some inlay or offset within the wooden wall it would also give the wall shading and sense of enevenness making the wall less boring. You will be making more points with the Lady Tinka.
Dear Tang,
Love that color combination and already have that light blue behind the speakers, the diffusors are stained that color. What's hard to find here at least in Utah is that shade of carpet!
They could wet the wood that they're turning grey, so the grain has texture. Once wet it'll dry, but the grain will raise unless it's been done before and then sanded down.
Tang, your horizontal wood looks awesome. I love it, straight up and down can get overdone in a room at times.
They could wet the wood that they're turning grey, so the grain has texture. Once wet it'll dry, but the grain will raise unless it's been done before and then sanded down.
Tang, your horizontal wood looks awesome. I love it, straight up and down can get overdone in a room at times.
I have seen horizontal with different thickness of woods with rather raw surface putting together into wall creating uneven surface looked awesome (I am not talking diffuser style though.) With downlight it looked even more naturally exquisite. Nothing beats wooden texture imo.
However you should meet my grandma. "My floors!!! It looks like some one took a razor blade to them!!" She had a house built and of coarse today it comes with a distressed looking laminate... Well, everyone but her loves it. Then again, she liked her oak cabinets with natural finish (GAG, BARF).
Ron,
This seems like a very personal decision. Why ask anyone? One thing for possible consideration- if you keep them natural, you can always stain later. If you stain now, I don't think there is any "going back". But hey, it's great to see it looking so much more real now!!
Marty
The house overall is in a contemporary style so the Lady Tinka likes the uniform grey with grain pattern visible (so it does not look like poorly painted drywall).
With respect without sugar ... Imo much of the beauty of walnut comes from its grain variety. Grey paint lessens the texture and dimensional character of the wood - at least as seen by my eyes from the photo. Why have walnut then paint it? I'd like to see what a little tung oil might do to an untreated piece. The cooler grey could work if you plan to bring wall art into the room. I would consider lighting and its temperature - which is hugely critical - before deciding. And I'd also think of the floor. I enjoy the warmth of wood and have a bias toward it - not knowing your vision for your contemporary home, I am in want of your context for it and fall back on my own, which thinks contemporary is Usonian.
Whatever you do I am confident it will be done well.
With respect without sugar ... Imo much of the beauty of walnut comes from its grain variety. Grey paint lessens the texture and dimensional character of the wood - at least as seen by my eyes from the photo. Why have walnut then paint it? I'd like to see what a little tung oil might do to an untreated piece. The cooler grey could work if you plan to bring wall art into the room. I would consider lighting and its temperature - which is hugely critical - before deciding. And I'd also think of the floor. I enjoy the warmth of wood and have a bias toward it - not knowing your vision for your contemporary home, I am in want of your context for it and fall back on my own, which thinks contemporary is Usonian.
Whatever you do I am confident it will be done well.
Thank you for your kind thoughts, Tim! The grey is a stain, not paint. I agree paint would look too drywall-like and hide the grain.
We will have walnut flooring on about the one-third third of the listening space’s floor starting four feet from the front wall. (This is a modification of MikeL’s design in which the entire approximately first third of his floor (starting at the front wall) is wood.) My space is 24’ long so this will give me a depth placement range of the speakers from about 10’ from the front wall to about 5’ from the front wall.
We feel if we have natural walnut on the walls and the floor the whole place will look too “hunt club” for the overall contemporary decor of the house (and the listening space).
Black or silver? The AS turntable is stainless steel the the gryphon speakers are black. The sources are in a seperate room so maybe a silver 7.5 preamp to match the AS turntable and black mono blocks to match the speakers. But if you move the preamp into the room the. Maybe a black 7.5 preamp. Time to think.
Tinka is working slowly on talking me into a trip to Asia. I said well we would have to re-visit Jack in Manila and, this time, meet Jim and go to Palawan; meet and visit Tang in Bangkok; and visit Danon Han in Kuala Lumpur. I said maybe in ten years.
Oh, and she promised me that none of these places will be hot or humid, or have spicey foods.
Tinka is working slowly on talking me into a trip to Asia. I said well we would have to re-visit Jack in Manila and, this time, meet Jim and go to Palawan; meet and visit Tang in Bangkok; and visit Danon Han in Kuala Lumpur. I said maybe in ten years.
Oh, and she promised me that none of these places will be hot or humid, or have spicey foods.