this is the haint blue ceiling of the porch on the very old house
where we are staying in south carolina
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Haint Blue is a term used for a range of pale, blue-green colors that are similar to the color of water or the sky. They’re often used to paint the porch ceilings of homes in the southern United States. The reason people paint their porch ceilings this color is a tale of tradition from the Deep South.
The word “haint” is a colloquial way to pronounce “haunt,” another word for ghosts or evil spirits. The word comes from the Gullah, a community of people descended from West African enslaved people who settled on the coast of Georgia and South Carolina.
The Gullah people created this color by mixing indigo with lime, milk, and other natural ingredients. They painted porch ceilings, shutters, and even doors in this shade to keep away “haints” aka. restless spirits. The idea was simple but powerful: they believed that haints were afraid of water, spirits couldn’t cross water or sky, and so the color blue would protect the home.
Haint Blue paint was a form of protection for the Gullah and the southern communities embraced it wholeheartedly. That’s why so many porch ceilings throughout the south are painted a beautiful light blue-green, which has become known as haint blue.This color is tied to memory, protection, and survival.
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‘color is a power which directly influences the soul.’
-wassily kandinsky
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charleston, south carolina, usa, October 2025
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Today I learned about ‘haint blue’ from you. I love learning new things every day. Very interesting, Beth.
Best wishes, Pete.
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so many stories and so much history out there in the world
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Interesting!
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thanks, I loved the history behind it
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Thank you for the colourful story behind the porch ceilings being painted “haint blue” 💙🌏
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I love the story behind it and noticed the great majority of porch ceilings here are indeed painted this color, rich or poor
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Who’d have known?
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it’s a part of history in this part of the country
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Lovely colour. Nice post x
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thanks!
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That’s a great story and a beautiful shade of blue. Sounds like you are enjoying your trip. Keep on keepin’ on.
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thanks, I am, and as you can probably tell, I really enjoy the things that make a place unique
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Yes, indeed. There is so much to learn, so much to be curious and full of wonder about in our world. Peace.
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wow, I did not know this… thank you for sharing!
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I loved learning this,and once I did, when walking through the neighborhoods of all kinds here, noticed that 90% of the porch ceilings were painted this color –
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Very interesting,
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it’s a fascinating background and much more to it, but this is the base of it
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Wow thanks for the lesson.
Haint is pronounced as haunt?
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it rhymes with ‘ain’t’ as we hear it, but the accent is strong and is meant as haunt.
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Thanks.
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So interesting Beth.
Thank you for sharing.
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my pleasure
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❤
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Great story. Thanks for the new thought to look for when I visit the South.
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I recognize the color but had no idea about its rich history.
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I love this, Beth. Thanks for the history around it, too.
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That is fascinating information, Beth. Thanks for sharing.
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I love this!
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Oh my gosh…I love this so much. I was just tinkering with my “project” this morning, writing about weathered old paint. Not quite the haint hue, but not far from it. Thanks for sharing, Beth! 🥰
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Fascinating! 💖
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it is-
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I am happy to report that I also learned something new here today, Beth. A very soul-ful color!
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right!
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Fascinsting. Thank you. Love that colour. X
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it’s beautiful and the history…
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I love this post! I’d heard about the ceilings with a particular shade of blue but never looked further into it. Thank you for teaching me today.
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the history is fascinating
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It surely is. I’ve learned a lot about the Gullah Geechee people in our trip to Charleston and down into Georgia.
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We had a woman teach us a lot about the culture and I’d love to learn more
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Fascinating. This was all new to me.
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Quaint haint history.
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I like to learn something new every day. Haint is my learning for the day.
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Pete, the stories and history here – amazing
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So interesting.
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the stories and history….
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Without reading your post, I did wonder right away about something potentially haunted when I saw your photo. So interesting to learn about this particular colour and its purported protection powers!
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yes, such a fascinating story
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I’ve never heard that word before.
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very old southern US and African folklore and spiritual backstory
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That is very interesting. I did not know about haint blue. Thank you, I’ve learned something today.
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it has a very long and interesting history
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Yes it seems like it. In Sweden (where I grew up) there is a traditional red paint that was made from iron oxide pigment obtained as a byproduct of the Falun copper mine in Sweden. It is called Falu red paint or Falu röd in Swedish. It also has a long and interesting history.
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Paint and color have fascinating histories
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Yes you are right
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New word, I do love the colour 👍
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yes to both for me!
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Thank you for educating me on this southern tradition, Beth.
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I had no idea –
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I literally just watched a movie centered around a haint. (I had to look the word up!) The movie was odd, no question, but I also couldn’t stop watching. Thank you so much for all the additional info; and I love learning about the paint colors on the ceilings. Fascinating!
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was it ‘sinners’? somebody said that it was a part of that, and the history is fascinating –
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Fascinating!
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it is such a fascinating story, going way back
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Haint is a new word in my dictionary, Beth, and I love the quote.
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it has such a long and interesting history
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Oooo, Sinners sounds good. I’ll check it out. This one was called The Hopewell Haunting set during the Depression.
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I haven’t seen either but have heard that sinners was great
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I didn’t know this. It’s such a pretty color – thanks for the history!
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My pleasure
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That is very interedting. Its a lovely colour too
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thanks, and so much history and meaning to the color
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haint that somethin’?
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I love the Kandinsky quote. I’m from the south, so I know these shades of porch ceilings well.
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this was all new to me, but now it all makes sense –
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😀
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I can’t believe I actually knew all this already.
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I was fascinated and why are you keeping all this to yourself ? this has to come up in conversation…
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You’d be surprised how often.
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