Landscape
What Landscape Actually Looks Like
Landscape 430 is a soft, grayed sage green. It reads more green than gray in direct natural light, but in lower light or north-facing rooms it can shift toward a cooler, more muted gray-green. The color has enough pigment to feel intentional on a wall without coming across as overpowering.
Landscape Undertones
The green here leans gray rather than yellow or blue. In warm artificial light, a subtle warmth can emerge, softening the gray quality. In cool north light, the gray component becomes more dominant and the color can feel quieter and almost silvery. It does not carry obvious pink or purple pulls.
Where Landscape Works Best
This color works well in spaces where you want a calm, nature-referencing backdrop without committing to a bold green. Bedrooms, living rooms, and home offices are natural fits. On exteriors, it reads as a grounded, earthy sage against natural materials like stone or wood trim. It holds up in both eggshell and matte finishes indoors.
Where to put Landscape
In a south or west-facing living room, Landscape pulls clearly green and feels settled and calm. Pair it with warm white trim and natural wood furniture to let the sage quality lead without the room feeling clinical.
This is a solid bedroom color. The muted, grayed nature of Landscape keeps the space restful rather than stimulating. In lower evening light, it deepens slightly and feels cozy. Go with a matte finish to reduce any cool reflectivity.
A home office benefits from Landscape's balance between neutral and color. It gives the room personality without distraction. In east-facing offices with morning light, it reads at its greenest and most energetic, settling to a cooler gray-green by afternoon.
On an exterior, Landscape reads as a grounded sage. It works against both warm and cool roofing materials. Against brick or stone, the gray undertone helps it feel cohesive rather than jarring. Use a satin or semi-gloss finish on trim to create clean definition.
What to Pair With Landscape
Landscape 430 pairs well with warm creamy whites for trim and ceilings, which keep the sage from reading cold. Deep charcoals or near-blacks on accents add contrast without fighting the green. Warm wood tones in furniture and flooring complement the earthy quality of the color.
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Colors that clash with Landscape
If an adjacent room or trim color leans strongly blue-gray, Landscape's green undertone can look muddy or indecisive at the transition point.
Deep golden or mustard accents can pull the green in Landscape toward an olive that feels heavier than intended.
Common questions
Landscape 430 has an LRV of 56.91, which puts it squarely in the mid-tone range. That means it has enough depth to read as a deliberate color choice on an accent wall without feeling as heavy as a deep or dark paint. It will show a clear contrast against a crisp white ceiling or trim.
It can, but expect the gray component to become more prominent in north light. The color will read less green and more of a cool gray-sage. If you want to preserve the green quality in a north-facing space, warm up the room with lighting and warmer wood tones rather than fighting it with a different paint.
Matte or eggshell are the best choices for walls. Matte minimizes any cool reflectivity and gives the color its softest, most natural read. Eggshell adds a little durability and is easier to clean, which makes it a practical choice for high-traffic rooms without changing the color character much.
Clary Sage SW 6178 is in the same grayed sage family and is worth sampling alongside Landscape 430. The two are not identical. Clary Sage can read slightly warmer and more yellow-green in some light conditions, so sample both on your actual walls before committing.
