Peach Pudding
What Peach Pudding Actually Looks Like
Peach Pudding is a warm, ripe peach tone that sits in the middle of the value scale, neither pale nor deep. It reads as a true peach, somewhere between a soft coral and a creamy apricot, with enough saturation to register as a real color choice rather than a whisper of warmth.
Peach Pudding Undertones
The color carries orange and yellow undertones with a quiet creamy quality that keeps it from feeling harsh. In rooms with cool north-facing light it can lean more orange and feel somewhat intense. In warm south or west light it softens and takes on a more golden, skin-like quality.
Where Peach Pudding Works Best
This is an interior-use color well suited to spaces where you want warmth and energy without going fully bold. It works in living rooms, dining rooms, and bedrooms where a cozy, sun-warmed feeling is the goal. It is a committed color, so smaller accent rooms and powder rooms are particularly good starting points if you are uncertain about committing to a full space.
Where to put Peach Pudding
A peachy mid-tone like this one flatters skin tones under warm incandescent or candlelight, making a dining room feel inviting and alive at evening meals. Keep trim in a warm white to avoid a harsh contrast.
In a bedroom it creates a cozy, warm atmosphere. Pair it with natural linen textiles and wood furniture to keep the overall look grounded rather than sweet.
A powder room is a low-risk way to test this color at full saturation. The small space amplifies the warmth, and the flattering quality under warm lighting makes it a natural fit for a room where guests spend only a few minutes.
What to Pair With Peach Pudding
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for Peach Pudding at this time. As a general pairing direction, it works well alongside warm whites, soft taupes, creamy off-whites, and muted terracotta or clay tones. Crisp bright whites can make it feel garish, so reach for whites with a warm or slightly yellow base instead.
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Colors that clash with Peach Pudding
Peach and cool gray fight each other directly. The orange warmth of Peach Pudding and the blue-gray coolness pull in opposite directions, making both colors look off.
A stark, bright white trim can make Peach Pudding look more orange and less refined than it actually is.
Gray-washed or ash wood floors and cool tile can conflict with the warm orange base of this color, leaving the room feeling visually unsettled.
Common questions
Peach Pudding has an LRV of 61.56, which places it in the medium-light range. It reflects a reasonable amount of light, so it will not darken a room significantly, but it is far from a near-white that disappears on the wall.
No. Peach Pudding 137 is listed as an interior color only, so you should not use it on exterior surfaces.
For most walls, an eggshell finish gives you enough sheen to wipe the surface clean while keeping the warmth of the color from looking flat. Matte works if you want a softer, more muted effect, but avoid high-gloss on a color this saturated unless you are using it on a single accent wall and want a deliberate statement.
Yes, noticeably. North light is cool and bluish, which will pull the orange undertones forward and make the color feel more vivid and intense. South and west light adds warmth that softens the orange and lets the creamy, golden side of the color come through. Sample it in the actual room before committing.
