Latest News
Mocha mousse’ to plum: The nine paint colours that can transform your home
As Pantone’s “colour of the year 2025” is announced, we explore the paint shades that are trending now – and find out which colours can improve our mood.
Deciding on the colour of a room at home is a major commitment, as most of us will live with it for years or even decades. So you might think that following trends in paint colours and paint effects would be too impractical and costly to contemplate. In fact, though, paint colour trends have garnered a lot of attention lately. Domestic interiors are becoming steadily more daring in terms of colours, including vibrant and pop hues, but more commonly darker, moody, sometimes jewel-like shades. And they are hard to ignore. So what key trends are emerging and what influences are shaping them?
Bonnie Pierre-Davis, an interiors strategist with the WGSN trend-forecasting company, tells the BBC: “An interest in tinted darks has risen in previous seasons. It has been spotted on catwalks and throughout the automotive and interior product design industries, beginning with dark blues and now shifting towards purples… Consumers are slowly growing confident with this colour on walls for its therapeutic quality.”
Confirmation that certain colours are on-trend comes from all areas of culture, according to Carinna Parraman. “In the current series of Strictly Come Dancing (the UK TV version of Dancing with the Stars), the dancers’ costumes are deep plum, purples, dark teak, yellow and green.” Parraman is professor of design, colour and print at the Centre for Print Research, University of the West of England, Bristol, where she organises an ongoing series of online lectures on colour.
International
Clampdown on fake Google reviews announced
Google has agreed to make “significant changes to its processes” to help tackle fake reviews of UK businesses, the regulator has announced.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) says the firm – which accounts for 90% of search in the UK – will attach warnings to companies found to have artificially boosted their star rating.
The worst offenders will have their review function deactivated, meaning they cannot receive any new reviews.
Individuals who repeatedly post fake or misleading reviews will be banned from posting – regardless of where they are in the world.
Consumer group Which? called the changes “a step in the right direction” but said they would need to be backed up with strong enforcement action, potentially including “heavy fines” if Google failed to stick to them.
Entertainment
How an epic series on Asia’s wildlife was filmed
Filming the BBC’s landmark series Asia took its crew on a four-year-long odyssey from the open ocean to the “roof of the world”.
From frozen mountains to parched deserts, and lush tropical rainforest to vast grassland steppes – Asia is Earth’s largest continent and home to an incredible array of environments.
Perhaps because of that sheer size and variety, until last year the BBC had never devoted a wildlife series entirely to it. The vastness, the crowded megacities and the extreme diversity of environments makes it harder to encapsule in a handful of episodes.
The Natural History Unit’s landmark series Asia took four years to make. “Many parts of Asia are extremely remote, largely unknown, or frequently off-limits,” producer Matthew Wright says. “Its wildlife is less well-studied than that of Africa and the Americas, so we had fewer leads to go on when we started our research.”
“We started by scouring scientific papers, books, websites and social media looking for stories. We spoke to colleagues, conservationists and tour guides too. Once running orders were drawn up, we spent two years and over 2,500 days filming,” said Wright.
Entertainment
The far-reaching impacts of wildfire smoke – and how to protect yourself
The air we breathe can have profound effects on our physical and mental health. Is there any way of protecting yourself from this pervasive problem?
All but 1% of the world’s population is exposed to unhealthy air that exceeds World Health Organization (WHO) limits for pollutants. In parts of the world, air quality has rapidly improved through policies that aim to limit pollution. But elsewhere, gains in air quality are at risk of being lost.
More than 25% of the US population is exposed to air considered “unhealthy” by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), according to a report by the climate non-profit First Street Foundation. By 2050, the number of people exposed to “unhealthy” days is set to increase by more than half. The worst days of air pollution (“hazardous” or maroon, under the EPA’s system) are expected to rise by 27%.
Wildfire smoke is one of the factors driving this trend. One study of PM2.5 (see fact box: What is PM2.5?) from wildfire smoke found that levels had increased by up to five micrograms per cubic metre in the western US in the past decade – enough to reverse “decades of policy-driven improvements in overall air quality”, the authors concluded.
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