Baby Girl
What Baby Girl Actually Looks Like
Baby Girl 2004-50 is a warm, saturated pink that lands in the coral-rose range. It is not a pastel and not a deep berry. At its LRV it carries real presence on a wall, reading as a confident pink in good daylight and shifting slightly warmer and more muted in low light. It is the kind of color that reads intentional from the moment you walk into a room.
Baby Girl Undertones
The color carries a coral warmth that keeps it from reading purely bubblegum pink. There is enough red in the mix to push it toward a rosy coral depending on the light in the room, especially in warmer incandescent or south-facing light where the orange notes can surface. In cooler north light it settles closer to a straightforward medium pink.
Where Baby Girl Works Best
Baby Girl 2004-50 is an interior paint color. Its saturation level means it works best where you want the color to be the point. A nursery is the obvious call, but it also holds up in a powder room, a small accent wall, or any space where a bold warm pink makes sense. Because it sits at a mid-range LRV it does not make a room feel dark, but it does own the space rather than recede.
Where to put Baby Girl
This is the most natural fit. The warmth keeps the room from feeling clinical, and the mid-range brightness means it stays lively without being harsh under the kind of soft lighting most nurseries use.
A small powder room can handle this level of saturation easily. The coral warmth flatters skin tones, which matters in a space with a mirror, and the color rewards the commitment in a room you are only in briefly.
One wall in a bedroom or living room lets the color make a statement without overwhelming. Pair the remaining walls with a warm white to keep the room balanced.
What to Pair With Baby Girl
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color. As a warm coral pink, it generally plays well with crisp whites on trim, soft warm neutrals, and deeper earthy tones that share its red-orange warmth.
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Colors that clash with Baby Girl
The warm coral undertone in Baby Girl 2004-50 will fight with cool gray or blue-gray surfaces in an adjacent or open-plan space. The contrast is not the complementary kind.
A bright cool or bluish white on trim can make the coral notes in this pink look muddier or more orange than you intended.
Common questions
The precise LRV is 51.94, which puts it solidly in the mid-range. It is not dark. A room painted this color will feel bright and energetic, not heavy. Smaller rooms stay comfortable, and the color does not absorb light in a way that makes a space feel smaller.
The Benjamin Moore code is 2004-50 and the hex is F5ACBC. Both render in the color spec block above.
Not at all. The saturation gives it enough weight to work in a powder room, a dining room accent wall, or any space where a warm coral pink feels right. It happens to suit nurseries well, but the color does not require that context.
For walls, an eggshell finish gives you a little sheen that keeps the color looking fresh and is easy to wipe down, which matters in a nursery or high-traffic space. Matte works if you want a softer, more absorbed look and the room does not see much scuffing.
