Titanic Rose

Benjamin Moore2092-50LRV 39#CB9E99
LRV39 — medium-dark
In the Room

What Titanic Rose Actually Looks Like

Titanic Rose reads as a softened, dusty rose, neither pale nor deeply saturated. It sits in a middle register of depth, which means it has real presence on the wall without overwhelming a room. In bright natural light it shows its pink side clearly. In lower or artificial light it can feel more muted, shifting toward a soft earthy blush. It is not a candy pink or a pastel. It carries enough gray in its composition to feel grown-up and grounded.

Undertone Read

Titanic Rose Undertones

The color sits in warm rosy territory with a gentle gray component that keeps it from reading as purely pink. That gray softens the warmth, giving it a dusty, antique quality. Whether the gray or the warm pink leads depends on your light conditions and what surrounds it. Pair it with warm whites and it leans warmer. Surround it with cool whites or blues and the muted, grayed quality steps forward.

Where It Works Best

Where Titanic Rose Works Best

Titanic Rose works well in rooms where you want warmth and personality without going heavily saturated. Bedrooms and living rooms are natural fits. It suits spaces that benefit from a cocooning, settled feel rather than a crisp or bright one. It can also work on a single accent wall in a room where most surfaces are neutral. Because its LRV falls in the mid-thirties range, it absorbs a meaningful amount of light, so it is better suited to rooms with adequate natural light or layered artificial lighting rather than very dim spaces.

Room by Room

Where to put Titanic Rose

Bedroom

This is where Titanic Rose feels most at home. The dusty, warm tone is restful without being sterile, and in a bedroom with warm-toned wood furnishings or brass hardware it settles into something genuinely inviting. Use a flat or matte finish to keep the mood soft.

Living Room

On all four walls of a living room it creates a wrapped, cocooning atmosphere. Keep your trim in a warm off-white and bring in natural textures like linen or jute to prevent the color from feeling too sweet or one-note.

Dining Room

The mid-depth tone works well by candlelight or warm-bulb lighting in a dining room. It flatters skin tones and makes meals feel warmer. Just make sure the room gets enough daytime light, since at this depth it will darken noticeably in dim conditions.

Powder Room

In a small powder room where you want drama and warmth, Titanic Rose earns its keep. The enclosed space lets the color fully surround, and the dusty character reads more sophisticated at close range than a brighter pink would.

What to Pair With

What to Pair With Titanic Rose

No coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color at this time. In general, Titanic Rose responds well to warm off-whites on trim, soft terracotta or clay accents, and muted sage or olive greens. Deep warm browns in wood furniture and flooring complement its earthier undertones.

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What to Avoid

Colors that clash with Titanic Rose

Cool, blue-toned whites on trim

A stark cool white on trim will pull the gray component of Titanic Rose forward and make the overall palette feel slightly discordant, as though the color is fighting its surroundings.

FixChoose a warm off-white for trim, something with a cream or faintly yellow base, to let the rosy warmth breathe.
Cool gray or blue-gray accent colors

Pairing Titanic Rose with cool grays or blue-grays in the same space creates a tension between warm and cool that tends to flatten both colors.

FixReach for warm neutrals, soft taupes, or earthy greens as companions instead.
Very low-light rooms

Because this color absorbs a fair amount of light, placing it in a north-facing or otherwise dim room can make it feel heavy and dark rather than warm and rosy.

FixLayer in warm-toned artificial light sources and keep large furnishings in lighter tones to compensate.
FAQ

Common questions

The LRV is 39.09, which places it solidly in the mid-range. It is not a light or pastel color, and it will behave more like a medium-depth tone on the wall, absorbing light rather than reflecting it the way a pale color would.

The code is 2092-50. You can use this to order samples or have it mixed at a Benjamin Moore retailer.

It depends on your light. In good natural daylight the pink reads clearly. In dim or cooler light the gray component asserts itself and the color reads more muted and dusty. Sampling on your actual wall in your actual lighting conditions is the only reliable way to know how it will land in your specific room.

Matte or eggshell are the most common choices for walls at this depth. Matte gives the softest, most velvety result. Eggshell adds just enough sheen for easier cleaning without making the color feel shiny or harsh.

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