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I wanted to paint my walls white. How hard could that be? You go to the paint store, buy a few gallons, and slap it on.I did that first part: I went to a paint store. But when I told the salesman I needed white paint, he pulled out that color chart that opens up like a fan to reveal six hundred different shades of white and throws you into a full on panic attack. (Ive never responded well to a multitude of choices.)Can you narrow it down to, say, the creamy ones? I asked. The salesman licked his fingers and snapped shut about a third of the Panic Wheel, leaving me with only about 400 decisions to make. I grew a whiter shade of pale and moisture sprang from my armpits. Clearly this was too much for me.I went home and launched a large-scale obsession. I asked friends and relatives for their thoughts on white paint. I visited my neighbor on the pretext of borrowing a can opener and secured the name of her paint color. I called a hotel where Id once admired the bedroom walls. I asked the bookseller, the neurologist, the florist, anywhere I saw a good white, I asked someone what it was. I went online, did some social networking, picked the brains of people I do not know.When Id finally assembled a group of color candidates, the wall of my dining room became a patchwork of samples, which I checked on at different times of day as the light shifted.I also painted the colors on white Bristol board and carried the samples from room to room. I made decisions, booked the painter, panicked and un-booked him. I threw away rejected colors, and then, in a frenzy of uncertainty, re-bought them for another look.I kept all this activity covert, under my husbands radar, so he wouldnt have me committed. I did eventually make a few selections, and it worked out all right, if not perfectly. (One room suffered through two repaints.) I offer here a list of my top choices of white wall paint (which are really almost-but-not-quite white) from a variety of manufacturers. This will save you weeks of trial and error, time better spent mastering the tango, buying a new garden hose, or writing your congresswoman. (If you do write her, please ask what color she painted her bathroom.) Benjamin Moore ($20-$50 per gallon) I used both Oatmeal and Linen White, the latter being more yellowy, the former more, well, oaty, but both nice colors. Swiss Coffee is another one I have used, which is like white with a little splash of espresso. Alabaster is a good B.M. color for trim, also.Donald Kaufman ($90 per gallon)#28 is a beautiful creamy white my sister-in-law has all over their house. I was too cheap to buy it, but D.K.s paint is amazing, more like light than paint, so you might want to splurge in a room or two.Farrow and Ball ($70 per gallon)This manufacturer makes my favorite colors, all of which have inspiring names. Its pricey, so I limited myself to using Matchstick in my office only, but if I were going to splurge Id have also gone for Satin Slipper or Clunch, colors so interesting they inspire conversation.YOLO ($40 per gallon) If you are in eco-friendly mode, these paints are non-toxic and low VOC, and Air.01 and Air.02 are lovely whites.Restoration Hardware ($32-$36 per gallon) Mediterranean White and Buttermilk are good choices and reasonably priced, and The Right White is great for trim.
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