Sebring White
What Sebring White Actually Looks Like
Sebring White reads as a calm, muted off-white. It is not a bright white and not a cream. In good natural light it sits cleanly on the wall without drawing attention to itself, which is exactly its appeal. In lower or artificial light it can shift noticeably grayer and pick up a faint green quality. It is a receding, relaxed color that makes a room feel settled rather than activated.
Sebring White Undertones
The undertone in Sebring White is a subtle green-gray. It is not warm in the yellow or pink sense, and it is not a true cool blue-white either. That green-gray quality is what separates it from standard warm whites. It tends to cooperate with natural wood tones and muted organic materials without pulling yellow. In rooms with warm tungsten or LED warm-white bulbs it can look more neutral. In rooms with cool daylight or north-facing exposure, the green-gray can become more apparent.
Where Sebring White Works Best
Sebring White works well anywhere you want a white that does not shout. It suits living rooms, bedrooms, and hallways where a clean but unpretentious backdrop is the goal. It handles open-plan spaces with mixed light reasonably well because its undertone is quiet enough not to clash badly under shifting conditions. It is a reasonable trim color if your walls are in a soft gray or sage family, and it works as an all-over color in rooms that receive good natural light.
Where to put Sebring White
In a living room with decent daylight, Sebring White acts as a clean envelope that lets furniture and textiles do the work. It will not compete with wood floors or upholstered pieces in earthy tones. In a north-facing living room, test it first because the green-gray undertone will be more visible and the wall can look cooler than you expect.
It is a solid bedroom choice if you want a restful, non-clinical white. The muted quality keeps the space from feeling stark under evening lamp light. Pair it with soft linen bedding and warm wood furniture and it reads quietly sophisticated without trying too hard.
In a bright kitchen with white or light wood cabinetry it holds up well. Be aware that stainless appliances and cool-toned stone countertops can amplify the green-gray side of its character. Warmer countertop materials like butcher block or warm quartz keep it anchored as a neutral.
Hallways with limited natural light are where Sebring White needs the most scrutiny. It can look noticeably gray-green under overhead incandescent or warm LED light, which may be fine or may feel dull depending on what you want. Satin or eggshell finish helps keep the walls from looking flat in these lower-light corridors.
Used on trim alongside walls in a soft gray-green or sage family, Sebring White reads as a warm, quiet white rather than a stark contrast. It is not the right trim choice against a warm ivory or yellow-based wall color, where the green-gray pull will create an odd tension.
What to Pair With Sebring White
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for Sebring White OC-137 at this time. As a general approach, it pairs well with soft sage greens, warm taupes, and natural linen tones. On trim it sits comfortably against walls in the gray-green or gray-beige range.
Colors that clash with Sebring White
If adjacent rooms or connected walls use a warm yellow-based or golden paint, Sebring White's green-gray undertone will look visibly cooler and slightly off by comparison, creating an uncomfortable contrast at transitions.
Pairing Sebring White with a bright blue-white trim color will make Sebring White look dingy or yellowish-green by contrast, even though neither color looks wrong on its own.
In kitchens where the countertop has strong blue or cool gray veining, Sebring White on the walls or cabinetry can look unexpectedly green rather than neutral.
Common questions
Its LRV is 78.5, which places it solidly in off-white territory. It reflects a good amount of light but is noticeably softer than bright whites, which typically land above 85. Most people would describe it as an off-white rather than a true white in person.
No. Sebring White OC-137 is its own color with a distinct green-gray character. It is not the same as White Dove OC-17, which carries a warmer, slightly yellow-beige undertone. The two can look quite different on the wall depending on your light source.
Eggshell is the most practical choice for living spaces and bedrooms. It is easy to clean and does not flatten the color the way flat finish can. Use a satin finish for kitchens, bathrooms, or trim where you need more durability and cleanability.
It can, especially in north-facing rooms or under cool daylight-balanced lighting. The green-gray undertone is subtle in warm or balanced light but more visible in cool or low light. Always test a large sample on your actual wall and observe it at different times of day before painting the full room.
