Lewiville Green
What Lewiville Green Actually Looks Like
Lewiville Green reads as a soft, faded sage, somewhere between green and khaki. It sits in the middle of the value range, neither light nor dark, which gives it a grounded, lived-in quality. The color has a low-saturation, almost powdery appearance that keeps it from feeling bright or assertive.
Lewiville Green Undertones
The RGB values show green and red channels that are nearly equal, with the blue channel notably lower. That balance pulls the color toward a warm, yellow-green territory with a distinct earthy, khaki cast. Depending on the light in your room, it can lean more olive-gray in cool north light or a warmer sage-tan in direct warm light.
Where Lewiville Green Works Best
Because Lewiville Green sits at a mid-range light reflectance, it works in rooms that get a fair amount of natural light without being overwhelmed by it. A south or west facing room lets the warmth in the color come forward. In a darker space it can feel heavy and somewhat drab, so add light where you can if that is your situation.
Where to put Lewiville Green
In a living room with good natural light, Lewiville Green creates a calm, retreating backdrop. It works especially well with wood furniture and natural textiles like linen or jute.
The dusty, low-saturation quality makes it easy to rest with. Keep bedding in warm whites or oatmeal tones so the wall color does not pull too gray at night under artificial light.
On kitchen cabinetry it reads as a restrained, earthy sage. Pair it with brass hardware and a warm stone countertop to keep the whole palette feeling intentional rather than muddy.
The muted, mid-tone character is easy to spend time with and does not compete with screens or artwork. A south-facing office will bring out the warmer, greener side of the color.
What to Pair With Lewiville Green
No specific Benjamin Moore coordinating colors are listed for this color in our database. In general, Lewiville Green pairs well with warm whites, raw linen tones, and muted terracottas. Wood tones in oak or walnut read naturally alongside it.
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Colors that clash with Lewiville Green
Lewiville Green has a warm, yellow-green base. Place it next to a cool blue-gray and the two undertones fight each other, making both colors look off.
A cold, blue-white trim will highlight the warmth in Lewiville Green in an unflattering way, making the wall color look yellowish by contrast.
Without warm natural light, the color can flatten into a dull olive-gray that feels draining rather than grounded.
Common questions
The precise LRV is 45.15, which places it solidly in the mid-range. It is not a light color and not a dark one, so treat it accordingly when planning your lighting.
Benjamin Moore offers it in both interior and exterior formulas. As an exterior color its earthy sage character works well on older or craftsman-style homes, particularly with natural wood accents or dark trim.
An eggshell finish is a practical choice for most walls. It gives the color enough depth to read well without highlighting surface imperfections the way a flat finish can obscure or a semi-gloss can expose.
That depends heavily on your light. In warm, direct sunlight it tends to read closer to a warm sage green. In cooler or low light it shifts toward a khaki-olive. Sample it on a large card and observe it at different times of day before committing.
