Feng Shui and Color for Spring on The Home Discovery Show

last week on the Home Discovery Show

How can feng shui and changing colors help you adjust to each season? What effect do you have on your environment? The Home Discovery Show's Ian Power and I talk color, lighting and what it means for newly budding spring. Check it out! 

Interview Transcript:

IP: Home Discovery Show is on the Corus Radio Network. My name is Ian Power. I want to bring in Anjie Cho, a holistic interior architect and author, sought after expert in the fields of Feng Shui and Green Design. A registered architect and certified Feng Shui practitioner, Anjie creates beautiful spaces throughout New York and beyond. The entire world is yours Anjie. Nice to have you on with us again.

AC: Hi Ian, so nice to be back.

Your book is already a best seller. Congratulations. That’s quite an accomplishment! That also tells us that there’s a huge interest in the things that you do and you talk about. Your book is 108 Ways to Create Holistic Spaces: Feng Shui and Green Design for Healing and Organic Homes. Just a quick overview on your book.

Well, my book is 108 tips in which you can incorporate Feng Shui and Green Design principles in your home. Simple things like what colors mean and what they symbolize or how can you save water in your bathroom, just small little digestible bits that are easy to implement so you really have no excuse not to do it.

Excellent. What’s happening in New York right now? You’re in New York. Is it snowing, raining, slitting?

It is getting a little bit warmer. It’s still pretty cold. It’s 40 degrees; I don’t know what that is in Celsius, but the snow is gone. It did snowed on the equinox though, which was a couple of days ago.

Well, here we’ve been in full on spring mode for at least a couple of weeks and last time we spoke, we wanted to get you back during spring to talk about color, because I know that’s really important. What is the relationship between spring, color, Feng Shui and how it relates to interior design? Can you talk about that a little bit?

Sure, of course. Humans are very visual. We’re very visual people, so color is a really great and easy way to change the feeling of your home and to change the mood in your home. So you could either do that with paint or adding accents, and spring is a great time to kind of refresh things. Spring is about new beginning and starting anew, so great spring color is green. Greens are really healing and they represent growth, and blues are also similar to greens. Blues and greens are both very comforting and they’re healing, because they actually remind us of the natural world, and the wavelengths are actually shorter, so in a physical way, it’s more comforting to our eyes.

That’s interesting. When you say blue, most people, when you just say the word “blue,” they think of the “blues” and they also think that blue, the color, is a little bit colder.

Well, it really depends on what shade of blue of course, right? So grayer blues can be cooler and maybe more depressing, and if you have that thought when you think of the color blue, then definitely go for green which is more hopeful. But we’re also talking about summer too, which will soon be around the corner, and as it gets warmer, that’s when, actually, blue is really good because it is cooling, and the color blue actually helps to cool down your spaces.

Okay. I’m thinking now, I don’t want to paint every season, obviously, so will these colors still work in the winter time when that rolls around eventually?

Absolutely. And besides painting the walls, you can add accents into your home through plants or pillows or rugs. Pillows, you can easily change up and plants are green all the time, but green is actually great for all year round because plants reminds us of the seasons, because they usually reflect what’s happening. Indoor plants like a little bit darker green in the colder months and they might start to flower in the spring and summer months, and that reminds us of the change of season.

Does Feng Shui play into the colors or the colors into Feng Shui? How does one relate to the other?

Feng Shui looks a lot at color and so, again, the colors, for instance green and blue, are very comforting and expansive, and they also represent the wood element. When you think of the wood element, you think of a plant, a plant that’s growing and expanding and growing from a small seed and growing in to huge redwood tree. You think about that growth and going from that energetic little sprout to a big, grounded, supported tree, and that symbolism can affect your life when you surround yourself with things like plants or the colors green and blue, because it encourages the growth and expansion in your life.

You do, obviously, residential properties. You also do commercial properties. When you’re doing an office, for example in a commercial property, is there a different technique or different form of Feng Shui applied to, let’s say, a commercial office than, let’s say, your home office?

In terms of color? They’re pretty similar, I think your home office and your work office, but for instance, a retail store, you might want more active colors like orange and red. I’m doing a retail store right now that we have a lot of black. You have more opportunities to get more exciting, I guess. In homes and offices, you want something more neutral, because you spend much more time in there and so your mind and your eyes don’t want to be activated all the time. You want to also have some time for rest and relaxation.

How about lighting inside the home? What role does that play in Feng Shui?

Lighting is really important. One thing that people don’t realize is that light represents the fire energy, so when you have more light and you have a home that’s able to be brightly lit, that represents being able to have more opportunities for advancement and to be able to see. Do you see the metaphor? When you have a lot of light, you can see more clearly what’s coming towards you. And it doesn’t mean that you need to have your lights at full blast all the time, but having the opportunity to clearly see your space around you translates into your ability to see opportunities coming to you and to your life.

Sure. And one of the things that, and we have to leave it here, but it must be noted that a lot of what you do, and I don’t know if it’s just your practice, Anjie Cho, if it’s Feng Shui related, but you’re very eco-conscious and you’re very energy efficient in all the things that you do.

Well I think that when you say energy, that can go in two ways. That can be a more esoteric energy, but also actual electrical energy, and they go hand and hand. My hope is that people begin to see how you can impact the environment around you and how, in turn, the environment can impact you. Once you realize you have that ability to change the world around you, and it can change you and support you, you really become able to shape a happy and nurturing life.

Holisticspaces.com is the website for Anjie Cho, interior architect, author and sought after expert in Feng Shui and Green Design....Anjie, thanks so much for your time. We’re gonna get you back in a short time from now, and we’re going to talk more about this and learn more about what you do. We really appreciate your time. Anjie Cho, HolisticSpaces.com. And we’ll be back in a moment on The Home Discovery Show on the Corus Radio Network.

Click here to listen to my other interviews with the Home Discovery Show

by Anjie Cho


From the leaky faucet upstairs, to an entire back yard overhaul, when it comes to projects around your home, the advice you need is heard weekly on Vancouver’s CKNW Home Discovery Show.

Join Ian Power every Sunday from 10 to 11 am PT as he’s joined by experts on home renovations and upgrades, plus the latest tools and tricks from the trades.


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Feng Shui Your Way to Better Health

featured this month on Examiner.com, by Cheryl S. Grant

As we get ready to spring clean our closets, now is the perfect time to create a sense of peace and harmony within your home. Anjie Cho, architect and author of 108 Ways to Create Holistic Spaces, offers up five tips for elevating your life and living space.

General health:
The Health area of the Feng Shui Bagua is called TAI CHI, which is related to your overall health, signified by earthy colors yellow-orange-brown, the number five, square or flat shapes, and the element of earth. The energy of the center affects physical, mental and emotional health.

The health area is in the center because it affects, and is influenced by, all eight bagua areas around it. This central area touches all aspects of your life, so of course it influences your health and well being.

A yellow toned square rug in the center of your bedroom, living room or home provides centralized stability, which is a great way to support your overall health.

Relieve stress:
Your bed, desk, and stove should be positioned so that you can see the door, the expanse of the room and you have your back against the far wall. You don’t want to be directly in front of the door. Instead, across the room, diagonally from the door, is typically the most ideal position or the “commanding position.”

This helps to curb your physiological response of fear that you may experience when you cannot see the door or what may be coming your way. Even if you are not consciously aware of it, it does affect you. It is like a stone that has water dripping on it lightly for years; the stress levels begin to wear down at you, “ says Cho. 

Kitchen nourishment:
The kitchen is the room where we are able to nourish our bodies with food. A kitchen with an open plan, cabinets that maintain between their tops and ceiling and white walls are ideal for promoting energy and proper nutrition.

Your refrigerator is also important so remove all expired or spoiled foods and keep it de-cluttered. 

Clear the Air:
The indoor air quality of your home is essential to our health and healing. Since we spend the vast majority of our time indoors we must eliminate toxic chemicals from your living environment. These chemicals are absorbed easily through the air and skin, and are also extremely dangerous if swallowed.

Non-toxic, green cleaning products are easy to find now at your local grocery stores. It is also easy to make your own with household items like vinegar and baking soda.

Cho’s favorite DIY recipe is for an all-purpose cleaning solution is to mix 1 part white vinegar and 3 parts water, with 9 drops of essential oil. Eucalyptus and tea tree oil are good options, as they are naturally anti-bacterial and anti-microbial. Shake up all the ingredients in a spray bottle and you’ve got a homemade, non-toxic cleaner. 


Amy T. Won: Behind the Art

Photo credit: Amy T. Won

Photo credit: Amy T. Won

AC: Please tell us about your art!

AT: I'm in love with our natural world, and I believe that if we take the time to explore it and look hard enough, there's much amazement and magic to be found. My hope is to create art that are like enchanting windows to the small and big adventures in life.

Photo credit: Amy T. Won

Photo credit: Amy T. Won

I'm currently working on an Explorations series of work, which straddles the line between the real and imagined, between abstract and representational. The current collection is called Journey Through The Seven Seas and is inspired by my own physical and perceived watery adventures. The pieces range from small watercolors on handmade paper framed in shadow boxes to larger acrylics on canvases.

(Display from 'Explorations Part 1: Journey Through the Seven Seas', Amy's traveling art show featuring paintings on handmade paper in vintage and found frames which will be at Artists & Fleas LA Feb 21st and 22nd.  )

(Display from 'Explorations Part 1: Journey Through the Seven Seas', Amy's traveling art show featuring paintings on handmade paper in vintage and found frames which will be at Artists & Fleas LA Feb 21st and 22nd.  )

("Moonrise over Seven Seas", Watercolor, acrylic and casein on handmade paper. )

("Moonrise over Seven Seas", Watercolor, acrylic and casein on handmade paper. )

I just started the second part of Explorations, entitled "Getting Lost" which are larger pieces about plunging into the unknown, getting lost in a world of wonder and the unmapping and unknowing of our inner and outer selves. I'm really excited about this body of work and while I can't show you much, here are a few teasers:

Photo credit: Amy T. Won

Photo credit: Amy T. Won

How do you think art can set the tone for a space or home?

Art is the quickest way to personalize and create character within a space since it can reveal much about the home owners' tastes and what they are drawn to and like to surround themselves with. Choosing the right art, in the right size, can really strengthen an existing room theme and take it to another level of interest and intrigue. It's also one of the most effective ways to set the stage for a desired mood or atmosphere depending on the size and subject, color, texture, medium and choice of display or framing.

Photo credit: Amy T. Won

Photo credit: Amy T. Won

Large pieces of art that take up a significant portion of the wall are like windows into another world or clear statements of style. Smaller pieces of art grouped together in the popular gallery style can show taste range, layer and cultural depth, allowing the home owner to curate a selection of images and objects that tell a story or create a certain mood.

Photo credit: Lonny/Patrick Cline

Photo credit: Lonny/Patrick Cline

Photo credit: William Waldron

Photo credit: William Waldron

What do you think people should look for when purchasing art for their home?

I always think that people should prioritize choosing art that resonates with them rather than just because it suits the color scheme and texture of the space. While the latter is important, selecting art that first means something to you adds a special layer of your own character and personality to your space, making it more interesting and joyful to inhabit. 

Photo credit: Jim Darling

Photo credit: Jim Darling

Think of art as the little reminders of qualities you like to surround yourself with-do you like to come home to cheerful joyous color because you're stuck in a drab cubicle all day? Abstracts in your favorite colors that lift the spirit might be your thing. Do you live in the city and yearn for a window into an enchanted forest as a mini reprieve to your daily life? Then perhaps an oversized painted woods scene or landscape tapestry to adorn the walls. Do you love the whimsy and carefree spirit of childhood and hope to infuse more of that into your life? Choosing naive-style art by your favorite artists would be a wonderful reminder to stay young at heart always.

When choosing art, the most important part is to consider the size of the wall it's going on and what furniture and objects will form the 'vignette' around it. It's always helpful to think of the art wall as a 'story' -what is it saying? How do you want it to feel? What is the mood you are trying to create? Make sure the art is proportional to the wall it's on, breaking rules of scale only if you are confident in the resulting drama.

Photo credit: Mike Kelley

Photo credit: Mike Kelley

Consider color and texture, though it's not necessary to match the art to the furniture and furnishings unless you're trying to design to a particular mood or theme. Consider whether it is framed in glass (usually heavier) and make sure that this would work in your space. Think of different types of art, not just painted ones-try tapestry, area rugs, flat sculptures, maps, masks, vintage book pages and so forth.

Photo credit: Jan Baldwin

Photo credit: Jan Baldwin

What do you suggest people should look for when purchasing original art?

Price is one of the first things people think about when purchasing original art, after deciding if they are drawn to it. There are many artists who offer emerging collector prices on some of their art for those attracted to original art but unsure if they can afford the high prices. These can be studies or experiments that are not in gallery-ready, finished quality. Pieces like these can be a charming addition to your collection, beautiful in the honesty of their imperfection and transparency of process.

Make sure to ask if the art is created on archival materials and what the suggested care for it is. Original watercolors framed in glass should be displayed away from sunlight and moisture. Are the oils or acrylics varnished? Is there a warranty for damaged frames? 

Is the piece signed by the artist? Does it come with a Certificate of Authenticity? Some folks like the extra touch of receiving one as assurance that the piece is what it claims to be.

Shopping for original art is a fun process, let your heart guide you and if an artist's work resonates with you, make sure to stay in touch, their future pieces might appeal as well.

by Anjie Cho


Amy T. Won is the artist, storyteller and enchantment-seeker behind The TreeSpace Studio, where she shares her explorations and painted mementos of our wonder-filled world. You can also find her adventures on Instagram (amytwon) and Facebook (The TreeSpace Studio) or take a peek into her inspirations on Pinterest (Amy Won).