Amelia Blush
What Amelia Blush Actually Looks Like
Amelia Blush reads as a light, muted pink with a warm peachy cast. It sits comfortably in the pale end of the spectrum, closer to a flushed skin tone than a true pink. In bright natural light it feels airy and almost neutral. In lower or artificial light it settles into a warmer, creamier blush.
Amelia Blush Undertones
The color carries peach and warm beige undertones. Those warm tones keep it from reading as a cool or candy pink. Depending on the light in your room, the peach quality can be more or less pronounced, but it is consistently present.
Where Amelia Blush Works Best
Amelia Blush works well in spaces where you want warmth without committing to a saturated color. Bedrooms and nurseries are natural fits. It also holds up in living rooms and sitting areas where soft, inviting color is the goal. Because its LRV is high, it keeps rooms feeling open and light-filled rather than closed in.
Where to put Amelia Blush
In a bedroom, Amelia Blush creates a calm, enveloping feel without being heavy. Pair it with linen bedding in natural cream tones and wood furniture to keep things grounded and livable.
Its soft peachy warmth makes it a solid nursery choice that works for any baby. It stays gentle rather than saccharine, and the high reflectivity keeps the room feeling spacious.
In a living room it reads as a warm neutral blush rather than an obvious pink, especially in rooms with good natural light. Anchor it with deeper-toned upholstery and wood tones so the walls feel intentional.
In a smaller bathroom with warm artificial lighting, the peach undertones will come forward noticeably. That can be flattering and cozy, but test a large sample first if your bathroom has exclusively warm bulbs.
What to Pair With Amelia Blush
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color at this time. As a general guide, Amelia Blush pairs well with warm whites, soft taupes, and dusty muted greens. Grounding it with a deeper warm neutral on trim or in furnishings keeps the palette from feeling too sugary.
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Colors that clash with Amelia Blush
The warm peach base of Amelia Blush can look muddy or visually uncomfortable when paired with cool, blue-leaning grays. The two undertone families work against each other.
A stark, cool bright white on trim will make Amelia Blush look pinker and more saturated by comparison, which can push the overall look toward something more juvenile than intended.
Common questions
The LRV is 77.62, which is high. That means it reflects a lot of light and will keep a small room feeling open rather than closed in. It is a genuinely good choice when you want color without sacrificing brightness.
It depends on your light. In warm or incandescent light the peach quality comes forward and it reads closer to a peachy cream. In cooler north-facing natural light it shifts slightly pinker. Either way it stays soft and muted rather than bold.
In bedrooms and living areas, eggshell is the most practical choice. It gives just enough sheen to be wipeable while keeping the color looking soft. For a nursery, eggshell or satin works well for durability. Avoid flat in high-traffic spots.
Yes, it is available in both.
