Pilgrim Haze
What Pilgrim Haze Actually Looks Like
Pilgrim Haze reads as a soft, dusty blue-gray. It sits in that middle territory between a true slate and a pale blue, with enough gray in it to feel grounded rather than airy. It is not a bold color, but it is not a whisper either. At its LRV it carries real presence while still feeling calm.
Pilgrim Haze Undertones
The color carries cool undertones that lean blue with a good measure of gray keeping it from feeling watery. In rooms with warm incandescent light it can edge closer to a neutral gray. In cooler north or east light the blue comes forward more clearly. It does not have meaningful green or purple pull.
Where Pilgrim Haze Works Best
Pilgrim Haze suits bedrooms where you want a settled, restful feel without going dark. It works on exteriors as a body color, where its weathered quality fits cedar, stone, and brick trim situations well. Living rooms and home offices are also natural fits. It holds up in rooms that get bright natural light without washing out, and in dimmer rooms it stays composed rather than going muddy.
Where to put Pilgrim Haze
In a bedroom Pilgrim Haze brings a quiet, cool calm that reads restful without feeling cold. Pair it with warm white trim and wood nightstands to keep the space from feeling clinical.
On living room walls it provides a sophisticated background that recedes behind furniture without disappearing. It plays well with sofas and textiles in cream, rust, or navy.
The cool gray-blue character of Pilgrim Haze is focused and calm in a home office. It does not compete with screens or artwork, and the mid-range depth keeps the room from feeling stark.
As an exterior body color Pilgrim Haze has a classic, slightly weathered quality that suits New England-style homes and craftsman exteriors. White or bright trim makes it feel intentional rather than tired.
What to Pair With Pilgrim Haze
No coordinating colors were specified in our database for this color. In general, Pilgrim Haze pairs well with crisp whites for trim, warm off-whites that keep the overall palette from going too cold, charcoal or near-black accents for contrast, and natural wood tones in medium or dark finishes.
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Colors that clash with Pilgrim Haze
If adjacent rooms have deep terracotta, mustard, or other intensely warm saturated colors, the cool gray-blue of Pilgrim Haze can look unintentionally stark at the transition.
Pairing Pilgrim Haze with a bright blue-white trim can make the overall palette feel cold and hospital-like, especially in north-facing rooms.
Common questions
Pilgrim Haze has an LRV of 37.75, which puts it in the medium range. It will noticeably darken a space compared to a typical light wall color, so factor in your room's natural light. Rooms with good south or west exposure handle it well. In a dim room it will feel considerably deeper.
The Benjamin Moore code is 2132-50. The hex and RGB values render from our color fields on this page.
Yes. Its dusty, weathered blue-gray character translates well to exterior applications. It reads as a classic, understated body color and holds up well against white trim, natural stone, and dark roofing materials.
That depends on your light source. In cool north or east light the blue character comes forward. In warm artificial light or rooms with strong south or west sun the gray pull becomes more dominant. It rarely reads as a pure gray or a pure blue, sitting reliably between the two.
