Napa Vineyards

Benjamin Moore427LRV 34#83AC58
LRV34 — medium-dark
In the Room

What Napa Vineyards Actually Looks Like

Napa Vineyards is a medium-toned, leafy green that reads clearly as green in most lighting conditions. It sits in the range between a fresh spring leaf and a slightly muted herb green, neither too bright nor too dark. In strong natural light it can feel almost cheerful and saturated. In low or north-facing light it settles into a deeper, more serious tone that reads closer to a forest green.

Undertone Read

Napa Vineyards Undertones

The color is rooted in yellow-green, which keeps it on the warm side of the green spectrum. It does not lean blue, so it reads as earthy and organic rather than cool or aquatic. That yellow base connects it visually to foliage and natural landscape tones.

Where It Works Best

Where Napa Vineyards Works Best

Napa Vineyards works well where you want a clear, committed green without going dark. It suits exteriors, particularly on siding where it reads as a grounded, nature-forward choice. Interior walls in casual spaces, sunrooms, or rooms with access to natural light can carry this color well. It has enough depth that it holds up on a full wall rather than washing out.

Room by Room

Where to put Napa Vineyards

Exterior Siding

On a home exterior this color reads as a grounded, landscape-inspired green that connects the house to its surroundings. It holds up well in full sun, where its yellow-green base stays lively without looking neon.

Sunroom or Garden Room

Rooms with lots of natural light and plant life are a natural fit. The color reinforces an indoor-outdoor feeling without requiring any decorating gymnastics to make it work.

Casual Dining Room

A casual dining space benefits from its warmth and energy. It is engaging enough to make meals feel convivial but not so intense that it overwhelms a smaller room.

Home Office

In a room with good daylight this green can feel grounding and focused. In a windowless office it will shift noticeably darker, so test a large sample before committing.

What to Pair With

What to Pair With Napa Vineyards

No coordinating colors are listed in our database for Napa Vineyards 427 at this time. As a starting point, this leafy green pairs naturally with warm off-whites on trim, soft terracotta or clay tones for an earthy palette, and natural wood finishes that echo its organic character. Deep navy or charcoal accents can ground it in more formal settings.

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What to Avoid

Colors that clash with Napa Vineyards

Cool gray or blue-gray walls nearby

Napa Vineyards has a warm yellow-green base that can look jarring next to cool blue-gray walls or trim in an adjacent space.

FixKeep neighboring rooms in warm neutrals or transition through a warm off-white rather than a cool gray.
Bright white trim

A stark, bright white trim can make this green feel unfinished or slightly harsh, emphasizing the yellow in the undertone in a way that reads as mismatched.

FixUse a warm or slightly creamy white on trim instead of a pure bright white to keep the palette cohesive.
Low-light north rooms

In a room with little natural light, Napa Vineyards darkens noticeably and can feel heavier than intended.

FixTest a large painted sample in the actual room before committing, and consider a slightly lighter green if the room is consistently dim.
FAQ

Common questions

Its LRV is 34.3, which puts it in the medium-depth range. It is not so dark that a small room becomes oppressive, but it will make a space feel more enveloping than a light color would. In a small room with good natural light it can work well. In a small, dim room you may find it heavier than you expected, so paint a large test patch and observe it at different times of day.

Yes. Its leafy, natural character reads well on siding and holds up in sunlight without fading into an unrecognizable tone. It suits craftsman, cottage, and farmhouse styles particularly well.

Sherwin-Williams Rosemary SW 6187 is a reasonable starting point. It shares the warm yellow-green base but runs slightly deeper and more muted. Always compare painted samples side by side in your actual space, since no two brands mix identically.

Eggshell is the standard choice for most interior walls. It gives a slight sheen that helps the color stay lively in medium light, and it is easier to clean than flat. Matte works if you want a softer, more muted look, but it can make a medium-value green feel a touch heavier.

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