Florida Pink
What Florida Pink Actually Looks Like
Florida Pink 1320 lands squarely in coral-red territory, vivid but not neon, with a richness that keeps it from reading as a simple pastel. In morning light it opens up and feels bright and energetic. By evening, especially under incandescent or warm artificial light, it settles into something deeper and moodier. It has real depth for a pink, which means it reads as a committed color choice rather than a tentative one.
Florida Pink Undertones
The dominant undertone here is warm red, and it is active. Warm-toned flooring, creamy trim, and adjacent textiles will pick up that red and amplify it. Cool or neutral surroundings can push it toward a truer coral. North light cools it down noticeably, nudging it away from warm and toward a crisper, slightly more intense read. South-facing rooms pull it lighter and warmer, leaning into the peachy-coral side of the color. Because the red undertone interacts strongly with neighboring surfaces, side-by-side sampling in your actual space and light conditions is not optional with this one.
Where Florida Pink Works Best
Florida Pink 1320 is listed for interior use. It has enough depth to work on full walls in living rooms and bedrooms without feeling washed out, and it can anchor cabinetry in a bold, unexpected way. Think of it as a statement color that works best when you commit fully rather than use it as a cautious accent. It suits spaces where you want warmth and energy without going fully into a red-dominant palette.
Where to put Florida Pink
On all four walls of a living room, Florida Pink 1320 creates a genuinely enveloping, warm environment. Morning gatherings feel bright and open; evening lighting deepens the color into something more intimate. Keep large furniture pieces in warm neutrals or natural materials so the walls do the talking without the room feeling overwhelmed.
A bedroom with this color benefits from the way it shifts. Daylight hours feel lively, and as the light drops, the room settles. Pair it with bedding in earthy tones or dusty mauves rather than competing brights. Avoid crisp cool whites on trim if you want a warmer, cohesive feel at night.
Florida Pink 1320 on cabinets is a high-commitment, high-reward move in a kitchen or bathroom. Its depth is enough to anchor the piece without it reading as a costume. A satin or semi-gloss finish will intensify the red undertone, so test a large sample first and look at it against your countertop material under both natural and artificial light before you commit.
What to Pair With Florida Pink
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for Florida Pink 1320. As a general approach, a clean warm white on trim keeps the red undertone from feeling heavy, while natural wood tones in flooring or furniture echo the warmth rather than fighting it. Deep, cool neutrals on adjacent walls or in upholstery can balance the intensity.
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Colors that clash with Florida Pink
The warm red undertone in Florida Pink 1320 and a cool gray or blue-gray in the same sightline actively fight each other. The contrast is jarring rather than dynamic.
A stark, cool bright white trim can make the red undertone in Florida Pink look more aggressive than intended, especially in north-facing rooms where the color already runs cooler.
Heavily orange-toned wood flooring picks up the red undertone and can push the overall palette into an overly warm, busy read.
Common questions
The precise LRV is 29.12, which puts it in the mid-range of depth. It is neither light nor dark, but it has enough depth to visibly shift through the day, reading lighter and more open in bright morning light and notably deeper and moodier after dark or under artificial light.
It can work, but north light will cool the color down and reduce its warm coral quality. In a north-facing room, it may read more intensely saturated and slightly less peachy than it appears on a chip or in a south-facing space. Testing a large painted sample on the actual wall over several days is especially important here.
For walls, an eggshell finish softens the intensity and makes the color easier to live with in a large area. For cabinets, a satin or semi-gloss makes sense for durability, but be aware that the shinier the finish, the more the red undertone will assert itself, so sample carefully before committing.
Paint at least a 12-by-12-inch sample directly on the wall, not on a card you move around. Look at it at multiple times of day, morning, midday, and evening under your actual artificial light. Hold it next to your trim, flooring, and any large upholstered pieces, because the red undertone interacts strongly with surrounding surfaces and colors.
