Pure Pink
What Pure Pink Actually Looks Like
Pure Pink 1325 sits in the lighter half of the pink spectrum, bright enough to read clearly on a wall but not so saturated that it feels aggressive. It has a candy-soft quality, the kind of pink that feels genuinely cheerful without shouting. On a large wall it shows up as a warm, flushed pink. On trim or a small accent it can feel almost delicate.
Pure Pink Undertones
The color carries warm undertones that lean slightly rosy rather than blue or lavender. That warmth keeps it from feeling cold or clinical. In rooms with a lot of natural daylight it can look fresher and more lively. In lower or artificial light it settles into a cozier, slightly deeper rose tone.
Where Pure Pink Works Best
Pure Pink works best indoors. It suits spaces where you want warmth and a light, uplifting feel without committing to a bold saturated hue. A single accent wall reads well because the color has enough pigment to hold its own without overwhelming a room. It also works head to toe in a smaller room, like a powder room or nursery, where you want a committed color statement on a contained scale.
Where to put Pure Pink
In a bedroom, Pure Pink brings warmth without weight. It works especially well in east-facing rooms that catch morning light, where the rosy tone feels welcoming. Keep bedding and textiles in whites or natural linens to avoid the space reading overly sweet.
This is a natural fit for a nursery. The lightness of the color keeps the room feeling open, and the warmth makes it feel safe and enveloping rather than stark. It holds up well as the child grows if you update accessories rather than repaint.
A powder room is a great place to commit to Pure Pink on all four walls. The small scale means the color wraps around you without feeling excessive, and warm lighting in most powder rooms will play up its rosy quality nicely.
As a single accent wall behind a bed or sofa, Pure Pink adds a focused hit of color without demanding that the whole room lean pink. Pair the surrounding walls with a clean white to let it stand on its own.
What to Pair With Pure Pink
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for Pure Pink 1325. In general, it pairs well with crisp whites to keep things fresh, soft warm neutrals to build a tone-on-tone scheme, and deep greens or navies if you want a bolder contrast that grounds the pink.
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Colors that clash with Pure Pink
Pure Pink and cool gray undertones work against each other. The pink can look washed out or slightly muddy when placed next to a blue-gray in the same space.
Very orange or red-toned wood floors and furniture can compete with the pink and make the overall palette feel busy and warm in a way that is hard to resolve.
Common questions
Pure Pink 1325 has an LRV of 56.62, which places it solidly in the mid-light range. It reflects a comfortable amount of light, so it will brighten a space without behaving like a true pastel or near-white.
Yes. In a north-facing room with cooler, indirect light, the color can look a little more muted and slightly deeper in tone. In a south-facing room with warm direct light, it will appear brighter and more vibrant. Sample it on the actual wall in your lighting conditions before committing.
For walls in a bedroom or living area, an eggshell finish is a practical choice that gives a slight sheen without highlighting imperfections. In a bathroom or powder room, move up to a satin for easier cleaning. Flat finish will make the color look its softest but is harder to wipe down.
Our database lists Pure Pink 1325 as an interior color only. If you want a similar pink on an exterior surface, ask a Benjamin Moore retailer about exterior-rated options in a comparable hue.
