Flurry
What Flurry Actually Looks Like
Flurry is a very light, warm white that sits just a breath away from true white. It has a softness that keeps walls from feeling stark or clinical, and in good natural light it simply reads as a clean, fresh white with a gentle warmth behind it.
Flurry Undertones
The undertone here is orange, and it is quiet but present. You will not see it clearly until you hold the color next to something cooler, like a bright white trim or a gray flooring. Then it becomes obvious. In north-facing light, Flurry reads a touch cooler and the orange pulls back. In south or west light, that warmth comes forward and the color feels creamier. The surrounding materials in your room, trim color, floor finish, furniture fabrics, all have a real influence on how that undertone registers. Test it on the actual wall before you commit.
Where Flurry Works Best
Flurry handles a wide range of applications. It works well on ceilings because its high reflectivity keeps rooms feeling open and airy without the coldness of a pure white. In small or low-light rooms it stretches the sense of space without going flat. It is a natural fit for trim and cabinets too, where its warmth softens the overall feel of a room. As a whole-home color it functions as a consistent, calm backdrop that lets art and furnishings do the work.
Where to put Flurry
Flurry is a strong ceiling choice. Its high reflectivity bounces light back into the room and the subtle warmth prevents the ceiling from feeling like a cold lid over the space.
In a hallway, powder room, or interior room with limited windows, Flurry keeps things from feeling tight. It reflects a good amount of light back into the space while the warm undertone stops it from reading cold or institutional.
As a trim or cabinet color, Flurry brings a softer alternative to bright white. Just make sure your wall color is warm enough to sit comfortably next to it, since a cool wall can make the orange undertone in the trim look off.
Flurry works as a whole-home backdrop because it stays neutral without disappearing. It gives art something clean to rest against, and the warmth keeps large open rooms from feeling empty.
What to Pair With Flurry
No specific coordinating colors are listed for Flurry in our database at this time. In general, pair it with warm whites on trim to keep the orange undertone from reading as a mismatch, and bring in natural wood tones or earthy textiles to reinforce its warmth.
Colors that clash with Flurry
If you pair Flurry walls with a bright, cool white on trim, the orange undertone in Flurry becomes more visible and the combination can look unintentional.
Cool gray floors pull the orange undertone in Flurry forward, and the contrast can make the wall color read muddier than it does in isolation.
In a north-facing room, Flurry reads cooler and flatter. Without warm materials around it, the color can lose its character and feel like an unremarkable off-white.
Common questions
Flurry's color code is CC-100. Its precise LRV is 84.74, placing it firmly in near-white territory. The hex and RGB values render in the color spec block on this page.
It can, but go in with clear expectations. In north light the orange undertone pulls back and Flurry reads a bit cooler and more neutral. That is not necessarily a problem, but add warm lighting and warm-toned materials to the room so the color stays lively rather than flat.
Yes. Its warmth and high reflectivity make it consistent across different rooms without feeling repetitive. It functions as a quiet canvas, staying out of the way while your furnishings and art take the lead.
Absolutely, and this matters more for Flurry than for many colors. The orange undertone is sensitive to adjacent surfaces, so paint a large sample on the actual wall and observe it next to your trim, floor, and in the room's typical light before you commit.
