![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_tzgeybfR_oSpkdSXc8no3Os10D_EndSSi3E2t8Kol0nmO6qillj0aERYupLzWhmEh99tQ0vWwQgid1LEBWJbMr-ZJ-e48a16hcoWpGZXLBInfsZDChVp0brg=s0-d)
![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_uFF25EKawGQhjUbSlK0GOf-p7QKGC2jdb8QY0dB6PfBlhMMQyOXbnMREz6s-8TjLTV5Wv1RSn8v5lIi6Md5e2zKDJRukbXliaGSfqAzXv3bMx06u8PVqxUl7c=s0-d)
![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_vrpVhhZVI5_-Ooz_wkEFYavtw-r97Wv5qHIAHa7jCrTWG_RJslwMURwiELykgFv-wSYiPahLYAu6XiaROoXwBI3TBgTmL7NPa1L1KUqhIV7nis5XuTt61S9Lc=s0-d)
Aqua and orange isn't a combo I see around too much (I grew up in the 80's, not the 60's!), but I am really digging it in this Nantucket guesthouse bedroom featured in
House Beautiful. I love the way the designer
John Willey described how it manages to feel so peaceful:
Don't take this the wrong way, but that room reminds me of 1960s Howard Johnson's colors — that wonderfully intense orange and aqua — but modernized a bit. It's such a terrific vintage palette and I have to admit, I love orange. The reason this pretty Florida-orange orange is calming is that it's printed on a natural beige ground instead of white. It tones down the intensity, makes it less bright, less Marimekko, more bedroomy.