Peach Cobbler
What Peach Cobbler Actually Looks Like
Peach Cobbler is a warm, medium-depth coral-peach. It sits clearly in the orange-pink range, neither pastel nor deeply saturated, but confident enough that it reads as a deliberate color choice rather than a blush or a near-neutral. In daylight it glows with a sun-warmed quality. In lower or artificial light it can deepen toward a more orange-coral tone.
Peach Cobbler Undertones
The color is built on a base of orange and pink working together. The orange keeps it from reading purely rosy, and the pink keeps it from tipping into a straight terra cotta or burnt orange. Because the undertone is warm through and through, it tends to play well with other warm tones and can feel charged or busy next to cool-dominant colors like icy blues or grey-greens.
Where Peach Cobbler Works Best
Peach Cobbler is an interior-only color rated for any room where you want warmth and some visual energy. It works particularly well in dining rooms and living spaces where you want a cozy, enveloping quality. It can feel lively in a kitchen or breakfast nook with good natural light. Use it more carefully in bedrooms if you are sensitive to warm, activating tones, and consider a lighter adjacent white on trim to give the eye a place to rest.
Where to put Peach Cobbler
A dining room is one of the strongest uses for Peach Cobbler. The warm saturation creates an intimate, flattering atmosphere at dinner, and the mid-tone depth means candlelight and warm-bulb fixtures will only intensify the effect in a good way.
On a single accent wall in a living room, Peach Cobbler adds punch without requiring you to commit every surface to the color. On all four walls it becomes an envelope of warmth, which works best in rooms with good natural light and furniture in earthy or neutral tones.
In a south- or east-facing kitchen with morning sun, Peach Cobbler reads cheerful and energetic. In a darker kitchen with limited windows, it can feel heavy, so test a large sample before committing.
Peach Cobbler can work in a bedroom if you lean into its warmth with soft textiles and warm lighting. If you prefer a calm, cool environment for sleep, this one may feel too energizing. A lighter value from the same orange-peach family would be a safer call.
What to Pair With Peach Cobbler
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color at this time. As a general pairing strategy, Peach Cobbler responds well to warm off-whites on trim, natural wood tones, and deep earthy greens or burnt browns as accents. Crisp cool whites can make it feel brighter but may also emphasize the orange in the undertone.
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Colors that clash with Peach Cobbler
If Peach Cobbler is used in one room that opens to an adjacent space painted in a cool grey or blue-grey, the contrast can feel jarring rather than complementary. The warm orange undertone in Peach Cobbler will look more orange, and the cool grey will look more stark.
Grey-washed or ash-toned hardwood floors can fight with the warm orange-pink of Peach Cobbler, leaving the room feeling color-confused rather than cohesive.
A stark, blue-based bright white on trim can make Peach Cobbler look more orange and can feel clinical next to such a warm wall color.
Common questions
The LRV is 46.45, which puts it squarely in the mid-tone range. It is not a light color and will absorb a noticeable amount of light, so rooms with limited natural light may feel smaller or darker. In a well-lit room it holds its warmth without feeling cave-like.
Benjamin Moore lists Peach Cobbler as an interior color and it can be tinted into their standard interior paint lines. For walls, an eggshell or matte finish will soften the look. A satin finish will add a slight glow that tends to enhance warmer colors like this one.
Yes. Under warm-toned incandescent or LED bulbs with a low Kelvin rating, the orange in the color deepens and the overall effect becomes richer. Under cooler daylight-balanced bulbs or in north-facing light, the pink component becomes more visible and the color can read a bit softer. Sample it in your actual space under your actual lighting before committing.
The Benjamin Moore paint code is 2169-40. The hex and RGB values are displayed in the color spec block on this page.
