Pink Canopy

Benjamin Moore010LRV 58#FBBEB2
LRV58 — mid-range
In the Room

What Pink Canopy Actually Looks Like

Pink Canopy is a medium-light pink that sits firmly in warm territory. It reads as a classic blush with a noticeable peachy warmth that keeps it from feeling cold or stark. On the wall it shows up as a true, readable pink rather than a near-neutral, so this is not a color that hides what it is. In bright natural light it brightens and leans more coral. In lower or artificial light it settles into a softer, more muted rose.

Undertone Read

Pink Canopy Undertones

The dominant undertones here are peach and coral, pulled from an orange-pink base. There is no blue or purple in this color, so it will not shift lavender under any typical lighting condition. That warm, fleshy undertone is what gives the color its friendliness, but it also means that any surrounding finishes with cool gray or blue tones will sit in contrast to it rather than blend.

Where It Works Best

Where Pink Canopy Works Best

Pink Canopy is available for interior use. Because it carries real color saturation at a mid-range light reflectance, it works best in spaces where you want warmth and personality rather than a quiet backdrop. Bedrooms, nurseries, and powder rooms are natural fits. Smaller spaces can carry it well precisely because the color is warm and advancing, creating a cozy rather than airy feel. In a large room with strong natural light, expect it to feel lively and present.

Room by Room

Where to put Pink Canopy

Nursery or Child's Room

Pink Canopy is a natural here. The warmth reads cheerful without being aggressive, and the peachy quality keeps it from feeling overly saccharine. Pair it with natural wood furniture and a warm white trim to keep the palette grounded.

Powder Room

A small powder room can absorb the full warmth of this color. With no windows or limited light, it will lean toward the softer, more muted rose side, which suits an intimate space. Brass or gold fixtures reinforce the warm undertone beautifully.

Bedroom

In a bedroom, Pink Canopy creates a warm, restful envelope. Keep bedding and textiles in ivory or warm linen tones rather than crisp white to avoid an undertone clash. The color rewards layering soft textures against it.

What to Pair With

What to Pair With Pink Canopy

No coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color at this time. As a general guide, Pink Canopy pairs well with warm whites, soft taupes, and natural wood tones that share its warm base. Cool grays and bright whites with blue undertones will fight it.

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What to Avoid

Colors that clash with Pink Canopy

Cool gray trim or cabinetry

Pink Canopy has a decisively warm, peachy base. Place it next to cool gray trim and the two undertones actively compete, making both colors look slightly off.

FixSwitch trim to a warm white or a soft ivory. The warmth in the white will bridge to the wall color instead of clashing with it.
Bright white with blue undertones

A stark, blue-based white on trim or ceiling will make Pink Canopy look more orange by contrast and can make the overall room feel unresolved.

FixChoose a trim white that reads creamy or warm when held against the pink. Test both chips together in your actual light before committing.
Chrome or cool-toned metal fixtures

Polished chrome reads blue-gray in warm light and will sit at odds with the peachy warmth of this pink, especially in a powder room or bathroom.

FixSwap to brushed brass, unlacquered brass, or warm bronze hardware to echo the orange-pink base of the wall color.
FAQ

Common questions

The precise LRV is 58.3, which puts it in the medium-light range, reflecting a solid amount of light without being pale. The hex and RGB values render in the color swatch above.

It works on all four walls. It is a real, readable pink with enough warmth to feel enveloping rather than overwhelming in most room sizes. If you are uncertain, start with a sample on a large poster board and live with it through morning and evening light before deciding.

The peachy warmth actually makes it more versatile than a purely sweet or candy pink. In a bedroom or powder room with warm metallics, natural wood, and layered textiles, it reads sophisticated rather than childlike. Context and pairing do most of the work.

Eggshell is the most practical choice for walls. It has just enough sheen to be wipeable without drawing attention to surface imperfections the way satin can. In a powder room or a space you want to feel more finished, satin is a reasonable step up.

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