Blossom Tint
What Blossom Tint Actually Looks Like
Blossom Tint reads as a very pale, warm off-white. It sits closer to cream than to white, carrying enough warmth to feel soft and settled rather than crisp or stark. In bright natural light it looks nearly white with a gentle golden warmth. In lower light or north-facing rooms it can shift toward a more noticeably creamy, slightly yellowed tone.
Blossom Tint Undertones
The underlying warmth here is yellow, leaning faintly toward a soft butter tone. There is no pink despite the name. The yellow is quiet enough that it rarely announces itself, but it does separate Blossom Tint clearly from any cool or neutral whites, and it will respond to warm artificial lighting by reading even creamier.
Where Blossom Tint Works Best
Because it reflects a great deal of light, Blossom Tint works well in rooms that need warmth without heaviness. It suits living rooms, bedrooms, and hallways where you want a cozy but airy feel. It is a reasonable choice for smaller spaces precisely because its high reflectance keeps things from feeling closed in. In kitchens with warm wood cabinets or butcher block, the creamy quality is a natural fit. It is less ideal in rooms with heavy north light if you want a clean near-white result, since it will read more yellow there.
Where to put Blossom Tint
On four walls it creates a warm, enveloping feel without feeling heavy, especially with plentiful natural light. Pair it with natural linen, warm wood furniture, and brass or aged bronze hardware for a cohesive result.
The softness and warmth make it easy to live with day to day. It works particularly well with warm wood bed frames and soft, earthy bedding tones. Avoid pairing it with cool gray or stark white linens, which will highlight the yellow cast.
Its high light reflectance helps a hallway feel brighter and more open than a mid-tone color would. The warmth prevents it from feeling institutional, which is a common pitfall with bright whites in narrow passages.
It is a natural complement to warm wood cabinetry, butcher block, or honey-toned stone. If your kitchen runs cool, with gray cabinets or stainless steel as the dominant finish, the yellow undertone may feel slightly at odds.
What to Pair With Blossom Tint
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color at this time. Generally, Blossom Tint pairs well with warm wood tones, soft sage greens, dusty blues, and muted terracottas. Trim in a clean warm white will feel harmonious, while a bright cool white trim will create noticeable contrast.
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Colors that clash with Blossom Tint
The warm yellow undertone in Blossom Tint and the cool cast of blue-grays pull against each other. The wall can look more yellow than intended, and the furnishings can look colder than you planned.
A stark, bright white trim with blue or green undertones will make Blossom Tint look considerably more yellow by comparison, which can feel unintended rather than curated.
In limited or north-facing light, the yellow undertone becomes more visible and the color reads as a definite cream rather than a near-white. If your goal was a crisp, barely-there white, this room will disappoint.
Common questions
The LRV is 83.64, which is quite high. In practical terms, the color reflects a lot of light and will keep a room feeling bright and open. It will not make a room feel dark even in moderate natural light.
No. Despite the name, there is no meaningful pink in this color. It reads as a warm, creamy off-white with yellow undertones. The name can mislead, so always sample it on your walls before deciding.
For most walls, an eggshell finish balances washability with a soft, low-sheen appearance that suits this kind of delicate warm white. Flat or matte works well in bedrooms and low-traffic spaces. Reserve satin for kitchens or bathrooms where moisture resistance matters more.
Yes, it is available in both interior and exterior formulations.
