Jeweled Peach
What Jeweled Peach Actually Looks Like
Jeweled Peach is a saturated, mid-tone orange-peach. It reads as a true warm orange with enough red in it to feel rich rather than pastel. This is not a soft, blushing peach. It is vivid and forward-facing, the kind of color that takes over a room intentionally.
Jeweled Peach Undertones
The dominant undertone is red-orange. There is no significant yellow pull, so it does not veer toward coral in the way some peaches do. In warm incandescent or afternoon light it intensifies toward a burnt orange. In cool north-facing light it can settle into a deeper, more clay-like tone. Bright daylight brings out the cleaner orange read.
Where Jeweled Peach Works Best
This color is best used as an accent wall or in a room where bold color is the point. Think a dining room you want to feel alive at dinner, a home office that needs energy, or an entryway that should make an impression on arrival. It is too saturated for most bedrooms unless you specifically want a warm, enveloping atmosphere. Avoid using it in small rooms with poor natural light, where it can feel heavy rather than vibrant.
Where to put Jeweled Peach
A saturated orange-peach on dining room walls catches candlelight beautifully and creates a convivial, energetic atmosphere. Keep the table and chairs in darker tones so the walls do the talking.
An entry painted in Jeweled Peach makes a confident first impression. Because entries are transitional spaces, a bold color here does not have to carry an entire living experience. Pair it with a dark floor and simple white ceiling.
If you want a workspace that feels stimulating rather than calming, this color delivers. Balance it with natural wood furniture and keep accessories simple so the wall color has room to work.
Small and windowless? That can actually work in your favor here. A powder room in Jeweled Peach becomes a deliberate jewel box moment. Use warm-toned lighting to reinforce the richness.
What to Pair With Jeweled Peach
Because no coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color, pair it using general principles. Jeweled Peach works well alongside deep navy or charcoal, warm off-whites with a creamy base, and natural materials like raw wood, rattan, and terracotta tile. Crisp white trim will sharpen its edges. Soft sage green can balance its warmth without fighting it.
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Colors that clash with Jeweled Peach
If Jeweled Peach is on one wall and an adjacent room is painted in a blue-gray or cool gray, the contrast can feel jarring rather than intentional.
Blush or rose-pink upholstery next to this orange-peach creates a muddled warm-on-warm conflict where neither color reads clearly.
A stark, blue-white trim paint can make Jeweled Peach look slightly garish by exaggerating its warmth against a cold white.
Common questions
Jeweled Peach has an LRV of 29.96, which puts it in the medium-dark range. It will absorb a meaningful amount of light, so rooms with limited natural light will feel noticeably darker. In well-lit rooms with good daylight, that depth is what gives the color its richness.
Benjamin Moore lists this color for interior use. If you want to use a similar tone outside, ask your Benjamin Moore retailer about matching it in an exterior formula.
Eggshell is the most practical choice for living spaces. It gives the color a gentle warmth without the flat-paint drawback of being hard to clean. For a powder room or a space where you want more drama, a satin finish will deepen the richness and reflect light in a way that makes the color feel more jewel-like, which suits the name.
Yes, with some selectivity. Warm honey-toned or walnut wood works well because it shares the warm base. Very orange-toned pine or golden oak can compete rather than complement, so if your floors or furniture lean heavily orange, consider whether the combined warmth will feel like too much.
