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Show Barn-Red Key to Color Plan ill k. -V I aSflErl r-n 5 aw- ' L room, for example, is papered in a soft rose shadow stripe and has a turquoise rug and draperies, j The kitchen and dinette have been joined attractively, but partial separation has been retained re-tained by placing of ceiling-high cabinets. Floors in both rooms are of tan, marbleized linoleum with black striped borders. -' tred Gund photo Desire for a particular shade of red paint influenced a pair of Rhode Island home-planners to turn their vacation trip into a paint-hunting expedition. They were building a house and wouldn't accept any color except exactly the one they wanted. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Donle found in New Hampshire the soft barn-red they were searching search-ing for. They immediately obtained ob-tained the "secret" formula and mixed paint for their traditionally tradition-ally styled home on a "wooded knoll overlooking a cove of the Providence River. Harmonious colors are responsible respon-sible for much of the house's charm. Turquoise awnings are in i careful contrast to the soft red walls. Because fire-resistant asphalt as-phalt shingles are available in a wide range of colors and textures, they were, chosen for the roof, also in turquoise. Trim and other accents are clear, crisp white. The house was selected by The American Home magazine for its American Home series. Inside as well as outside, turquoise is a principal color. Combined with rose and dubonnet, it complements comple-ments every room. The living |