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For 2026, Sherwin-Williams Predicts These Four Color Palettes Will Rule
For 2026, Sherwin-Williams Predicts These Four Color Palettes Will Rule

Yahoo

time17 hours ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

For 2026, Sherwin-Williams Predicts These Four Color Palettes Will Rule

All products featured on Architectural Digest are independently selected by Architectural Digest editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, Condé Nast may earn an affiliate commission. When Sherwin-Williams introduced its Colormix Trend Forecast Anthology: Volume One for 2024, the storied paint brand strived to frame its collection as objectively as possible. How else can you explain such straightforward-named palettes like Blues and Greens and Reds and Purples? It may sound reductive in a vacuum, but at the time this pared-back approach to storytelling meshed perfectly with our post-(post-?)pandemic desire to use color as a vehicle for creativity and self-actualization. Now that Sherwin-Williams' Trendsight Team of forecasters has had two years to see how those colors show up in the real world, their 2026 Colormix Trend Forecast Anthology: Volume Two is a 'refined evolution' of Volume One's open-ended celebration of color, organized into four expressive palettes that indicate both a softer gaze and a sharper focus. 'It's centered around the whole idea of constant evolution,' Sherwin-Williams color marketing manager Emily Kantz says when discussing the differences between Volume One and Volume Two. 'Even minor nuances influence color in a big way.' Frosted Tints The 12 colors in the palette Frosted Tints articulate that notion clearly thanks to their playful separation of blues and greens from any biophilic context. Eschewing nature, these shades, which span from the near gray of Modern Lavender to the dusty green of Celery, feel sweeter and more pastel. But when applied independently, and especially in minimalist contexts, Watery, Grape Mist, and Lite Lavender read less as Easter Sunday, and more as sophisticated elegance. To integrate these Frosted Tints into existing design trends, Kantz advises applications in the kitchen. There, a softly colorful cabinet can stand out from any cool, chromatic neutrals without raising the temperature. 'If you take a minimalistic, pared-back aesthetic and you inject one of these softer colors like Halcyon Green, it instantly elevates that space and brings a dose of life to it.' Sunbaked Hues Despite its arid appearance, the Sunbaked Hues palette represents another sort of reaction to blues and greens—or at least their hegemonic rule over the boundaries of 'biophilic' color aesthetics. Indicative of influences such as Georgia O'Keefe's 1930s paintings and Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesen, Sunbaked Hues argues that sun, sand, and fire are just as worthy of a place in those design conversations alongside watery blues, floral greens, and grounding earth tones. Indeed, within the palette itself, warm shades abound: from the terra-cotta of Coral Island to the full-bodied passion of Heartthrob. Lemon Chiffon and Sundew, Classic Yellow and Armagnac—all evoke dusty landscapes and hazy sunlight. Sunbaked Hues encourages us to find more nuance within sunlight throughout the day. That makes these colors a brighter alternative to Frosted Tints, capable of letting light into a cold space. Restorative Darks Much less of a radical reconception, Restorative Darks is, Kantz admits, the palette that most closely resembles its Volume One predecessor. But rather than just reaffirming a trend, Volume Two explores the deepest depths of our continued love affair with rich, robust colors. To do that, Kantz and the Sherwin-Williams team decided to break down one of their most beloved colors, Carnelian, to explore new avenues. 'Carnelian has been in multiple forecasts in the past few years,' Kantz explains. 'So we took it and pulled it apart. We made it a little bit more red for Dark Auburn, but then we also made it a little bit more purple in Plum Brown.' That's not to say red and purple are the only way to think about Restorative Darks. From the beaming rays of Relic Bronze to Tarragon's smarter, more stylish take on teal, there's a deep, time-tested color that can pair with any room's particular material profile. For those interested in a more timeless (and cautious) way to approach color-drenching, Garden Gate, Limestone, and others can make for a strong but nonetheless welcoming statement. Foundational Neutrals Since, as Kantz says, 'grays are never going away', the modern classics of Foundational Neutrals balance the need for something dependable with a desire for self-expression. Covering the spectrum from White Snow to the blue-black of Inkwell, these neutrals serve as a solid backdrop, though their subtle shifts in undertone invite closer inspection. The end result is a set of contemporary colors that evoke a familiar warmth. Shades like Sanctuary and Armory suggest the possibility to create a sense of safety and comfort within our homes. Universal Khaki announces the return of that ubiquitous '90s shade, offering a way to stand out while taking refuge in the past. Even Clove, with its bronze undertone, finds a way to make black shine a little bit brighter. In short, Foundational Neutrals can elevate your style and keep you on top of color trends without having to throw away all of your neutral-colored furniture. By zooming out slightly from the yearly trend cycle, the dialogue between Sherwin-Williams' Colormix Trend Forecast Anthologies speaks to how subtly our perception of the same colors, and what we want from them, can shift over time. From the outside looking in, it might just appear to be more of the same. But in a world where minor details mark the difference between a unique style and its imitation, these evolved colors offer more ways for anyone to find the pigment that fits them best. Originally Appeared on Architectural Digest More Great Stories From AD Not a subscriber? Join AD for print and digital access now. Touring Tomokazu Matsuyama's Brooklyn Studio Frank Lloyd Wright's Final Design Was Finished 66 Years After His Death—And You Can Watch Its Construction The Best Online Furniture Stores for Just About Every Interior Style

UPDATE BrightFarms closing in Snyder County next month
UPDATE BrightFarms closing in Snyder County next month

Yahoo

time21-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

UPDATE BrightFarms closing in Snyder County next month

SELINSGROVE — Seventy-six BrightFarms employees will lose their jobs in March when the hydroponic greenhouse closes. Employees were notified Wednesday that production will cease March 14, five years after the 280,000-square-foot plant opened in Pawling Station off Route 522 in Penn Township. After releasing a statement that the company was "pausing" operations, BrightFarms clarified late Thursday that the plant will close. 'We have made the difficult decision to suspend operations at our Selinsgrove farm. As BrightFarms grows with new, larger farms, we are grateful for our Pennsylvania team and will support them through this transition. We remain committed to servicing our Pennsylvania customers," the statement said. "Our newest farms in Illinois, Georgia, and Texas, each have the capacity to scale up to 40 acres. These new greenhouses will help us reach over two-thirds of the U.S. population with healthy, leafy greens," the statement said. Company officials did not address questions regarding reasons for the closure. Established in 2011, the Irvington, N.Y.-based company was not required to give employees 60-day notice under the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act because it did not meet the threshold of 100 employees. The Snyder County plant opened in 2020 as the company invested more than $20 million building the hydroponic greenhouse where two million pounds of salad greens are grown. Located in a Keystone Opportunity Expansion Zone, BrightFarms is exempt from paying taxes on the 21-acre site until 2029. It was the largest plant the company operated at the time. "Unfortunately, I'm not surprised," Snyder County Commissioner Joe Kantz said of the pending closure. From the beginning of its operation, he said, BrightFarms had issues with wastewater disposal and was spending "several hundreds of thousands of dollars" a year trucking the water to a treatment facility in Milton. Kantz said he's also heard the plant may need renovations, but no one from the company has been in contact with county or municipal officials to discuss any issues or even confirm a pending shutdown. A BrightFarms employee who learned Wednesday they will be out of a job in a few weeks said the company provided an email contact for BrightFarms senior director of marketing Jessica Soare in the event they were approached by media for information. The automated email response said Soare would be out of the office Feb. 25 and provided no other way to reach her, but it did prompt the updated response from the company confirming the plant closure. A rapid response team from Advance Central PA will meet with employees Tuesday at the plant to provide a wide range of information, including reemployment possibilities, health care and prescription assistance, Executive Director Erica Mulberger said. In addition, CareerLink will host a job fair in early March, she said.

Vote-by-mail reform, mental health, and 911 funding top counties' priorities for 2025
Vote-by-mail reform, mental health, and 911 funding top counties' priorities for 2025

Yahoo

time31-01-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Vote-by-mail reform, mental health, and 911 funding top counties' priorities for 2025

Sherene Hess, president of the County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania, speaks about the organization's legislative priorities for 2025 in the state Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025. (Peter Hall/Pennsylvania Capital-Star) Pennsylvania county commissioners have called on state lawmakers to address flaws in the commonwealth's vote-by-mail law and increase funding for mental health care and 911 services. Local election officials continue to scramble to meet mail ballot deadlines and face legal challenges more than five years after voting by mail became an option for every Pennsylvania voter, members of the County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania (CCAP) said. 'Achieving these priorities will not only improve county government, but more importantly, they will improve our communities and the lives of those we serve across the entire state,' Sherene Hess, president of CCAP's board of directors, said. Hess and other members of CCAP's board gathered in Harrisburg on Wednesday to lobby members of the Pennsylvania General Assembly as the 2025-2026 legislative session gets underway and days before Gov. Josh Shapiro is set to roll out his proposed budget. Pennsylvania's 67 counties are largely responsible for delivering services to residents that the state and federal governments pay for. The counties also administer elections, which have become more complicated since former Gov. Tom Wolf signed Act 77 to allow absentee voting without an excuse in 2019. Voting by mail has been popular, but has also been the subject of unfounded claims of fraud and legal challenges. 'Act 77 remains unclear, or in some cases silent, on how counties should address certain situations,' CCAP board member Joseph Kantz, a Snyder County commissioner, said. County election officials want the law to be clear about whether to count mail-in ballots that are returned without secrecy envelopes or with missing or incorrect dates, Kantz said. Although state and federal courts have ruled several times on that question, the state Supreme Court recently agreed to take up the question again. Election officials have also been summoned to court over decisions about notifying mail ballot voters that they have made disqualifying mistakes and whether they should be allowed to correct them or vote by provisional ballot. The widespread adoption of voting by mail has placed additional pressure on election officials to ensure ballots are mailed out in a timely manner and to count them fast enough to avoid delays in reporting election results. Allowing counties to prepare ahead of election day mail-in ballots to be counted would reduce that stress, 'particularly in a busy presidential year like we've just faced,' Kantz said. Wolf vetoed an omnibus bill passed in 2021 that would have given election officials the additional time they want to process ballots because it also contained measures Democrats said would disenfranchise voters. Subsequent efforts to amend Act 77 in similar omnibus bills have failed. Kantz said Wednesday that CCAP is looking for a fresh approach by addressing each of the issues in a separate piece of legislation. Northampton County Commissioner Lori Vargo Heffner said that as the stigma surrounding mental illness and mental health treatment has continued to crumble, the need for significant increases in funding for such care has become more urgent. Counties deliver mental health care including community residential programs, family based support, outpatient care and crisis intervention on behalf of the state. 'Counties have been able to continue to serve their residents, but are stretching the limited state funding to its breaking point,' Heffner said. 'It's not hyperbole to say that the lack of adequate state funding paired with increased demand has pushed the collapse of the community mental health system.' In 2024, CCAP called for a $250 million increase in mental health funding. That would have been a fraction of the $1.6 billion in additional funding that a survey of counties found is necessary to fully fund community-based mental health services. Shapiro's first two budgets increased county mental health funding by a total of $40 million. This year, CCAP is asking for $100 million more, Heffner said. That would allow the counties to maintain their systems and increase capacity, she said, noting that people seeking community-based mental health care report wait times of at least six months and often much longer. 'The unmet community need has created a growing population of individuals that have become involved with emergency departments, law enforcement and the criminal justice system when no appropriate diversion exists,' Heffner said. 'The remaining solutions are hospitals or incarceration, both of which are not appropriate for settings for mental health treatment and are very costly.' In Shapiro's first budget passed in 2023, the legislature approved an increase in the 911 surcharge that cellphone subscribers pay each month to support emergency dispatch services. Hess, the CCAP president, said Wednesday that despite the increase, counties must fund a significant cost of transitioning to Next Generation 911 systems through local taxes. The General Assembly must reauthorize the surcharge before it sunsets at the start of 2026 and CCAP is calling for an increase to between $2.14 and $2.20 a month. 'This is something that must be addressed,' Hess said. '911 call volume is increasing, and revenue from the 911 surcharge is failing to maintain pace with the system costs over the last several years.' A spokesperson for the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency said the Shapiro administration is aware the surcharge does not cover the counties' full costs, but it is awaiting an efficiency study from the legislature that is required as part of the 2023 legislation. Because the larger surcharge only took effect last year, it's unclear how much revenue it generated. 'In 2023, the prior surcharge of $1.65 covered about 74% of all reported expenditures incurred to provide 911 service,' spokesperson Ruth Miller said. 'The remaining costs are paid by the counties through their general funds or other revenue sources.' Next Generation 911 is a digital system that uses the internet to connect the public with public safety answering points, also known as 911 centers, through voice, text messaging and video. It also increases the ability of centers to handle higher volumes of calls for help during natural disasters and to automatically transfer callers to the appropriate centers using geolocation information. 'A strong, connected, 911 system is critical to ensuring services can still be provided efficiently in situations of mass emergency, and to keep up with the pace of ever changing technological advances,' Hess said.

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