Oakwood Manor
What Oakwood Manor Actually Looks Like
Oakwood Manor is a mid-tone sandy beige, sitting comfortably between a light tan and a soft caramel. It reads as warm and grounded without veering into orange or yellow territory. In generous natural light it feels open and honeyed. In dimmer or cooler light it settles into a more muted, earthy tone.
Oakwood Manor Undertones
The hex value places this color in warm territory. The RGB breakdown shows red and green values that are meaningfully higher than blue, which is the signature of a golden or wheat-leaning beige. Expect a subtle warmth that can read as golden in direct sunlight and as a quiet tan under overcast or north-facing light. It does not carry obvious pink or green pulls based on its values.
Where Oakwood Manor Works Best
A mid-tone beige at this warmth level works well in living rooms, dining rooms, bedrooms, and hallways where you want a color that feels settled rather than stark. It has enough depth that it avoids the washed-out look lighter beiges can get on large wall areas. It is available in both interior and exterior formulas, so it is a workable choice for exteriors like siding or trim where a warm neutral reads as welcoming.
Where to put Oakwood Manor
On four walls this color wraps a living room in a warm, easy-going neutral that works with wood furniture and natural textiles. Keep trim a clean white to give the walls definition and prevent the space from reading too uniform.
The mid-tone warmth makes for a cozy but not heavy bedroom. It works particularly well with linen bedding and wooden headboards. In a room with limited natural light, test a large sample before committing, since the color can read noticeably darker and more golden than it appears on a small chip.
Warm beiges have a long track record in dining rooms because candlelight and warm bulbs amplify their golden quality. Oakwood Manor will look richer at dinner than it does at noon, which tends to flatter the space.
Available in an exterior formula, this color reads as a classic warm sand or fieldstone-adjacent neutral on a house. It plays well with dark brown or black trim and works with brick or stone accents that have warm undertones.
What to Pair With Oakwood Manor
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for Oakwood Manor at this time. As a warm sandy beige, it pairs naturally with crisp whites for trim, deep espresso browns for grounding, soft sage or muted olive greens for a nature-forward palette, and charcoal or near-black accents for contrast.
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Colors that clash with Oakwood Manor
Oakwood Manor's warm golden base will fight with cool gray or blue-gray trim, flooring, or large furnishings. The contrast reads as discordant rather than intentional.
A bright, blue-white trim color will make Oakwood Manor look dull or dingy by comparison, emphasizing the yellow in the wall color in an unflattering way.
Common questions
Oakwood Manor has an LRV of 59.05, which places it in the middle range of the light-to-dark scale. It reflects a meaningful amount of light without feeling pale, so it works on large wall surfaces without washing out or feeling heavy.
The Benjamin Moore code is 1095. The hex value renders in the color swatch on this page.
Yes. Benjamin Moore offers this color in both interior and exterior formulas.
No neutral beige looks identical across lighting conditions. In a south or west-facing room with warm afternoon light, Oakwood Manor will lean golden and bright. In a north-facing or low-light room it will read as a deeper, quieter tan. Always sample it on the actual wall in your specific room before committing.
