PPG Paints Selects Chinese Porcelain as Its 2020 Color of the Year

The color's blend of cobalt and moody ink blue "offers escapism in today's data-driven society," according to the manufacturer.

1 MIN READ

PPG Paints

Pennsylvania-based PPG Paints named Chinese Porcelain (PPG11660-6), a shade that blends cobalt and ink blue, as its 2020 Color of the Year. The manufacturer says the color imparts calmness and restful sleep while also “offering the spirit of hopefulness.”

“The faster technology moves and the more convenience it offers, the more we seek activities, experiences, and lifestyles that impart slowness and realness into our lives,” said Dee Schlotter, PPG senior color manager, in a public statement. “The need for simplicity and escapism from technology is, in part, the reason that consumers are craving blues like Chinese Porcelain that bring us closer to natural elements such as the sea and sky.”

PPG Paints

According to PPG, the increasing need for connection in an unmoored world was a recurring theme during the company’s annual global color workshop. Stylists converge at the workshop to analyze runway, lifestyle, demographic, geographical, and global trends over several days to determine the shades for the upcoming year’s global color forecast.

Schlotter said consumers are tiring of grays and are looking to infuse more colors. Blue is the easiest entry point from a neutral palette and is the most explored color family by users, with 34% higher engagement than neutrals, according to data released by Paintzen, a PPG-owned technology platform.

“PPG’s Chinese Porcelain delivers the energy and brightness of cobalt blue—a trending hue taking the automotive, consumer electronics, and fashion industry by storm,” Schlotter said. “It also incorporates a deep, muted navy tone that is popular in residential and hospitality design.”

PPG says Chinese Porcelain provides the “perfect, agreeable backdrop” for vibrant colors to pop. The shade can also act as a feature color in a bedroom with white bedding and crown molding to provide contrast or it can be layered in living room spaces with additional blues.

About the Author

Vincent Salandro

Vincent Salandro is an editor for Builder. He earned a B.A. in journalism and a B.S. in economics from American University.

Upcoming Events

  • Zonda’s Q4 Housing Market Forecast

    Webinar

    Register Now
  • Zonda’s Building Products Forecast Webinar

    Webinar

    Register Now
  • Future Place

    Irving, TX

    Register Now
All Events