Sheraton Beige
What Sheraton Beige Actually Looks Like
Sheraton Beige is a soft, warm beige that sits comfortably in the middle of the value range, neither too pale nor too deep. It carries the kind of settled, earthy warmth that reads as immediately livable. In bright daylight it shows a clean tan quality. In softer or lower light it picks up a slightly peachier, more golden cast. It is the kind of color that rarely feels cold or stark, which makes it forgiving across a range of interior conditions.
Sheraton Beige Undertones
The dominant undertone is warm peach-tan, with a secondary hint of gold. These warm undertones mean the color will lean toward the orange-pink side of the beige family rather than toward gray or green. Rooms with warm artificial lighting will amplify the peachy quality noticeably. Rooms that receive cooler north or east light will temper it back toward a more neutral tan, though the warmth never disappears entirely.
Where Sheraton Beige Works Best
Sheraton Beige works well in living rooms, dining rooms, hallways, and bedrooms where you want a warm, welcoming neutral that does not demand attention. Because it has enough depth to read as a true color rather than an off-white, it holds up on four walls without feeling washed out. It is a solid choice for older homes with warm wood trim, brick, or earth-toned stone, where a cooler neutral would fight the existing materials.
Where to put Sheraton Beige
On all four walls of a living room, Sheraton Beige creates a cocoon of warmth without feeling heavy. Pair it with natural wood furniture and off-white upholstery for a look that feels settled and relaxed.
The warm peachy undertones make a dining room feel convivial and flattering in candlelight or warm overhead fixtures. It works especially well with wood wainscoting or a natural wood table.
In a hallway with limited light, the warmth of Sheraton Beige prevents the corridor from feeling cold or tunnel-like. A satin or eggshell finish helps it hold up to cleaning without becoming too shiny.
In a bedroom it reads as restful rather than stimulating, and the warm tone makes the room feel comfortable and cozy without the color doing anything theatrical.
What to Pair With Sheraton Beige
No specific coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color at this time. As a general pairing principle, Sheraton Beige plays well with warm whites on trim, deeper earthy browns or taupes for accents, and soft muted greens or terracottas for contrast.
Colors that clash with Sheraton Beige
If Sheraton Beige is used in one room that opens directly into a space painted in a cool gray or blue-gray, the contrast can make the beige look orange and the gray look icy at the same time.
A stark, bright white trim color can make the peachy undertones in Sheraton Beige look more orange than intended, and the contrast can feel harsh rather than crisp.
Gray tile, cool concrete, or blue-toned hardwood can pull against the warm peachy quality of this color, making the wall color look mismatched with the floor.
Common questions
The LRV is 66.52, which puts it solidly in the medium-light range. It will reflect a reasonable amount of light in a room but will not behave like a near-white. In a room with good natural light it will feel open. In a room with limited light it will feel warm and cozy rather than bright.
Yes. Its peachy-tan base is closely related to the color family of most warm wood species, so honey oak, walnut, and similar woods feel at home with it rather than in conflict.
Eggshell is the most practical choice for most walls. It gives a soft, low-sheen surface that is easy to clean without the clinical look of a satin or semi-gloss. Reserve flat finish for ceilings or low-traffic areas only.
Yes. It is part of the Historical Colors collection, a line of historically inspired shades drawn from classic American interiors. The HC designation in the code reflects that collection.
