Easter Pink
What Easter Pink Actually Looks Like
Easter Pink 2076-50 is a medium-value rosy pink, warm and clearly pink without veering into red or coral. It sits in that classic candy-pink zone, cheerful and direct. In good natural light it reads as a bright, clean pink. In dimmer conditions or artificial light it softens and can feel more muted and dusty.
Easter Pink Undertones
The color carries a blend of warm red and cool lavender underneath the pink, which means it can shift depending on what surrounds it. Pair it with warm whites and it leans warmer. Put it next to anything with blue or violet and the cooler side comes forward.
Where Easter Pink Works Best
This color is approved for interior use. It suits spaces where you want an unapologetically pink statement, a nursery, a child's bedroom, a powder room, or an accent wall in a playful living space. It has enough saturation to hold its own on all four walls without feeling washed out.
Where to put Easter Pink
This is an obvious home for Easter Pink. It reads bright and friendly without being aggressive, and it holds up under the warm artificial light typical of kids' rooms at night.
A small powder room is a low-commitment way to go bold with this color. The enclosed space amplifies the pink, and visitors notice it immediately, which is exactly the point.
In a living room or bedroom, one wall of Easter Pink against a warm white on the remaining three reads playful rather than overwhelming. It gives the room a focal point without committing fully.
What to Pair With Easter Pink
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color, so pairings here are based on established color principles. Easter Pink works well anchored by crisp whites, soft off-whites with a touch of warmth, or deeper berry and plum tones that echo its red-and-lavender mix. Natural wood tones and warm metallics like brass also complement it well.
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Colors that clash with Easter Pink
If adjacent rooms or trim carry a cool blue-gray, Easter Pink can look unintentionally clashing rather than contrasting, because the lavender undertone in the pink fights with the blue in the gray.
Orange-based warm tones fight with the cooler lavender side of Easter Pink and make both colors look muddy rather than complementary.
Common questions
The precise LRV is 49.82, which puts it squarely in the mid-range. It is not a light pastel and not a deep tone. It will read as a true medium-value pink on your walls.
Yes, but it will shift. Under warm incandescent or soft-white LED bulbs it takes on a warmer, slightly peachy cast. Under cooler daylight-balanced bulbs the lavender side comes forward. Pull a large sample and look at it under your actual lighting before committing.
No. It is a confident, saturated pink, and it can work in a powder room, a home office, or anywhere you want a deliberate color statement. The key is pairing it thoughtfully with grounded neutrals or deeper tones so the room feels intentional.
For walls in most rooms, eggshell gives you a slight sheen that reflects light without showing every imperfection. In a high-traffic space or a kids' room, satin is easier to wipe down. Save flat or matte for ceilings only.
