
Let’s Talk (paint) Color
The Let’s Talk Paint Color Podcast allows listeners into the minds of renowned color experts to benefit from their years of experience consulting on color decisions. The January 2023 podcast update brings new guests each episode to join an insightful conversation with Amy Krane about all aspects of the use of color for the built world. You’ll find it enlightening and informative. Homeowners and design professionals alike struggle choosing paint colors.
In Episodes 1- 20 of Let’s Talk Paint Color experts Amy Krane and Amy Woolf unravel the mysteries of how to choose color for your home or business, interior and exterior. It’s a rousing conversation between colleagues which spans all aspects of architectural color and design decisions involving color for our modern life.
Scroll through the player to play individual episodes. Transcripts of each episode are below.
Episode Thirty Four:
Colorful Brooklyn with Regina Myer
A place of incredible cultural diversity, Brooklyn NY boasts a population of 2.65 million people. It would rank the 4th largest City in the U.S. if it stood on it’s own. In the beginning, it was an agricultural Dutch settlement called Breuckelen meaning broken land or marshes. In 1883 it was connected to Manhattan by the eponymously named bridge. It eventually evolved into the densely populated fascinating borough it is today. We all know icons such as Barbra Streisand, Ruth Bader Ginsberg, Notorius B.I.G., Lena Horne and so many more hailed from the borough. So renowned worldwide is Brooklyn now, the Japanese have just invited The Brooklyn Made Store, which showcases the diversity of Brooklyn through products created by local entrepreneurs, to exhibit there.
As Brooklyn has grown and developed, reinvented itself again and again the stewards of its development have shepherded and managed its growth and constant revitalization. One such public servant is veteran Urban Planner Regina Myer. From Director of City Planning for Brooklyn to the President of the Brooklyn Bridge Park where she steered the creation of the 225 million dollar green space, Regina is now at the helm of the Downtown Partnership, and who better is there to talk about the constantly evolving design of this beloved place.
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Episode Thirty Three:
The Colors of the Shakers
In 1774 an illiterate, pious and fervent young woman from Manchester England, led a handful of followers to the New World to seek religious freedom and freedom from persecution. Her name was Ann Lee and she founded a new Protestant sect that later became known as The Shakers. In their day, there were thousands of Shakers and many communities throughout NY and New England. Now there are 3. That’s 3 people not communities. They lived communally and prided themselves on their hard work and piousness. The Shakers became known for their magnificent design of objects: Shaker furniture, baskets and boxes are highly collectible. Even today, Shaker is one of the most popular kitchen cabinet styles.
Cindy Dickinson, Education Director at Shaker Hancock Village in the Berkshires of MA, joins me for a conversation about the Shakers. We dive into the Shaker colors, how they were used and what makes them so arresting.
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Episode Thirty Two:
Color for Production Housing
Tobi Saunders, owner of 1837 Color & Design, is a trained Architect and Color Consultant. At her company she specifies exterior color and materials for production builders around the county. Tobi shares her unique journey from architect to color strategist, specializing in production building communities. She reveals the complex process of creating cohesive color palettes for entire neighborhoods while balancing economics, regional preferences, and visual diversity. This conversation explores the growing importance of color expertise in residential development and the challenges of working with builders across different regions.
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Episode Thirty One:
Dagny Thurmann-Moe : Maximalist Scandi Design
When you think of Scandinavian design the look of a colorless winter day comes to mind – think pale grey, white and perhaps washed out blue. But this is a modern-day invention. Dagny Thurmann-Moe, the founder of Koi Colour & Design Studio designs exteriors, interiors, products, and CMF strategies for brands seeking a stronger identity through color, materials, and finishes. Dagny is known for challenging the idea of “timeless” design — instead creating time-bound and aesthetically sustainable environments that reflect culture, history, and human needs. She is the fearless proponent of bringing color back into Norwegian interiors and exteriors and is leading the campaign to add pinks, terracottas, greens and yellows back onto the urban cityscape like it was 400 years ago. Check out her TedX talk on the topic and tune in to hear a true polymath talk about using color.
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Episode Thirty:
Maye Ruiz: The Mexican Queen of Color
“Mexico is not beige!” is a defining quote from one of Mexico’s hottest new designers. Maye Ruiz is an interior designer, creative director of Maye Estudio, and one of the designers selected for the AD100 México & Latin America list, which recognizes the most influential designers and architects in the region. Her work stands out for its bold exploration of color, materiality, and visual storytelling, creating spaces that blend tradition, modernity, and a unique chromatic palette.
Maye has built a career spanning residential, commercial, and hospitality design, always embracing color as a powerful tool for spatial transformation. Her design process is deeply influenced by color psychology, craftsmanship, and cultural context, resulting in interiors that tell stories and evoke identity. Based in San Miguel de Allende, that colorful and unique city, Maye’s home, a Unesco Historic site, is the perfect backdrop for the ground breaking work she is doing. Check out her work on https://www.letstalkpaintcolor.com
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Episode Twenty Nine:
The Colors of Olana
If you’ve never walked into an interior which caused your jaw to drop then you haven’t witnessed the overwhelming effect a built environment can have. There are few of these places extant and even fewer here in the United States. I’m lucky to live just a few miles from one – the hilltop home of the Hudson River School painter Frederic Church, Olana. Perched on a mountaintop overlooking the Hudson River, it’s sited facing southwest to take in the views of the Catskill Mountains to the west and the winding path of the river down towards NYC. Olana is a sight to behold. Church was the most famous painter in America in the late 19th century. His massive paintings of the natural world wooed critics and the masses alike. Olana was his masterpiece. 250 acres of woodlands, lakes and carriage roads with a house unlike any built before. Its design was wrested from his imagination after trips to the Middle East. Exotic doesn’t even begin to describe it. Its architecture and interior colors are unique. You’ve never seen a home as colorful as this. It shouldn’t work, yet it does. Until you get the opportunity to visit Olana listen in. It’s the next best thing.
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Episode Twenty Eight:
2025 Color & Design Trends
We welcome back former co-host Amy Woolf to discuss the 2025 Colors of the Year and other design trends percolating right now. Which interior colors are the rage, what exterior paint colors are the most popular and what’s new in furnishings and decor.
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Episode Twenty Seven
Alkemis Paint
Imagine the tagline for a new paint company “Paint your walls with rock instead of plastic.” If that doesn’t pique your interest I don’t know what would. Meet Maya Crowne and Price Latimer, the entrepreneurs who conceived of a safe, plastic free interior house paint made from natural materials with minerals for pigmentation. It’s a fascinating story about two women who never dreamed they would become paint manufacturers one day trying to change the way the world paints, one can at a time.
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Episode Twenty Six
Talking Shop with Eve Ashcraft
Think about the skills needed to create a paint color which matches a cat’s fur coat. Now think about those needed to transform the look of a big city transit hub. That describes the color chops of Architectural Color Consultant, Eve Ashcraft. She came to NYC after attending RISD and with her unique color skills became the creator of Martha Stewart’s original paint line as well as the color-guru of Moynihan Train Hall in NYC. Through the decades, her prowess in the field and her client base grew to include esteemed commercial clients and countless residential home owners. Meet Eve and hear about her journey through the world of color.
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Episode Twenty Five
Benjamin Moore’s Director of Color Marketing Andrea Magno
What do Barbra Streisand, The LA Dodgers and Larry David have in common with one of America’s most revered companies? Did you guess? They were all born in Brooklyn! In 1883 The Moore Brothers released their first coatings product and the paint world hasn’t been the same since. Benjamin Moore’s products and colors are perceived as the pinnacle of good taste and quality. Their color lines have expanded over the years to include almost 3500 colors adding a world of choice which delights and sometimes overwhelms. My guest today is Andrea Magno, the Director of Color Marketing and Design at Benjamin Moore and it was my great pleasure to be able to go straight to the source to ask those questions we designers have been itching to. It’s a free-wheeling and fun conversation which covers many topics all related to their fabulous range of paint hues.
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Episode Twenty Four:
Uncommon Kitchens with Sophie Donelson
While this episode began as an interview based on a book about kitchens, it became something much more – A treatise about how we live in our homes, how to make a kitchen your own in ways which acknowledge who you are, how you live and what you love. Sophie Donelson is a former Editor-in- Chief of House Beautiful Magazine. She is a design journalist, speaker, and strategist whose work celebrates the connection between people and their homes. Her 2023 book Uncommon Kitchens: A Revolutionary Approach to the Most Popular Room in the House is where our conversation starts. Sophie’s humanistic and forgiving approach to design resonates. Packed with helpful ideas about how to consider your kitchen design she showcases tens of unique kitchens created by designers for themselves and their clients and by others as well. When a conversation veers towards describing some colors as “the squeeze of lemon on a fishy pasta”, compares matching upper and lower kitchen cabinets to attaching one’s blouse to their underwear and compares the size of some kitchen islands to Escalades you know you’re in for a ride.
