Beautiful in My Eyes

Benjamin Moore1170LRV 76#F0E2D4
LRV76 — light
In the Room

What Beautiful in My Eyes Actually Looks Like

Beautiful in My Eyes 1170 reads as a pale, warm blush with peach and pink tones working together in a quiet, understated way. It sits solidly in the light range, closer to a washed-out warm white than a true pink or peach, but it carries enough color to register clearly on a wall rather than disappearing into a near-neutral. In bright daylight it leans peachy and fresh. In lower or artificial light it can settle into a warmer, creamier pink tone.

Undertone Read

Beautiful in My Eyes Undertones

The hex value puts this color in warm territory, blending pink, peach, and a hint of sand. There is no blue or green here. The warmth is consistent, which means it will harmonize with other warm tones and can clash with anything that pulls cool or gray. In rooms with warm incandescent bulbs the peach quality comes forward. In rooms with cool daylight the pink side is more visible.

Where It Works Best

Where Beautiful in My Eyes Works Best

Because the LRV sits above 75, this is a genuinely light color that works well in rooms where you want warmth without heaviness. It suits bedrooms and bathrooms where a soft, skin-flattering glow is welcome. It can also work in a living room or dining room if you want a color that reads almost neutral from a distance but adds visible warmth up close. It is a dependable choice for low-light rooms that need warmth rather than brightness.

Room by Room

Where to put Beautiful in My Eyes

Bedroom

This is where Beautiful in My Eyes performs most naturally. The warm blush-peach tone is flattering against skin and creates a calm, restful atmosphere. Pair warm wood furniture and soft linen textiles with it and the room will feel cohesive and easy to live in.

Bathroom

In a bathroom with warm lighting the peach quality comes forward and gives the space a flattering, rosy glow. Keep fixtures and tile on the warm side, such as soft whites or warm creams, to avoid a conflict between cool surfaces and the warm wall color.

Living Room

Used in a living room with good natural light, this color reads as a sophisticated warm near-neutral. It adds personality without demanding attention. In a north-facing room with little sunlight it will lean more visibly pink, which may or may not be what you are after.

Nursery or Child's Room

The soft blush tone works well in a nursery without committing to a loud pink. It is gentle, warm, and easy to build around with natural wood tones, soft greens, or ivory accents.

What to Pair With

What to Pair With Beautiful in My Eyes

No coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color at this time. In general, Beautiful in My Eyes pairs well with warm whites on trim, soft taupes, warm tans, and muted terracotta or clay accents. Avoid pairing it with cool grays or stark bright whites, which will pull the underlying warmth into an unflattering pink.

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What to Avoid

Colors that clash with Beautiful in My Eyes

Cool gray flooring or tile

Cool gray floors or large-format cool tile will pull against the warm peach-pink undertones in this color and make the walls look muddy or oddly pink rather than warmly blush.

FixSwitch to warm-toned flooring such as honey oak, warm beige tile, or a natural wood. If the cool floor is fixed, shift the wall color toward a warmer cream or greige instead.
Bright white trim

A stark, bright white trim with blue or neutral undertones will make Beautiful in My Eyes look darker and more saturated than it is, and the contrast can feel harsh rather than crisp.

FixUse a warm white on trim, something with a cream or soft yellow base, to keep the transition smooth and let the wall color read at its best.
Cool-toned furniture fabrics

Upholstery or drapery in cool blues, cool grays, or blue-greens will fight with the warm blush wall and make the room feel color-confused.

FixAnchor the room with warm neutrals, soft terracottas, muted tans, or dusty rose tones that share the color's warmth rather than contradicting it.
FAQ

Common questions

The precise LRV is 75.76, which places it firmly in the light range. It will reflect a good amount of light while still registering as a warm, colored tone on the wall.

It depends on the light. In warm incandescent or evening light the peach quality is more visible. In cooler daylight, especially in north-facing rooms, the pink side comes forward. Either way, it stays soft and light rather than saturated.

For walls in living areas or bedrooms, an eggshell finish gives you a slight sheen that adds depth without being reflective. In bathrooms, a satin finish holds up better to moisture and is easier to wipe down. Flat or matte works in low-traffic bedrooms if you prefer no sheen at all.

Yes, but know that in low light the color will shift warmer and pinker. It will not feel cold or unwelcoming, but it will read more visibly as a blush pink rather than a peachy near-neutral. That can be a plus in a cozy bedroom and a consideration in a main living space.

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