Woven Jacquard
What Woven Jacquard Actually Looks Like
Woven Jacquard reads as a mid-depth warm wheat, sitting somewhere between a golden straw and a muted buff. It is lighter than a true caramel but richer than a standard pale cream. In a well-lit room it glows gently. In lower or north-facing light it settles into a quiet, almost parchment tone. Either way it holds visual warmth without being aggressive about it.
Woven Jacquard Undertones
The hex and RGB values tell a clear story: this color carries yellow and gold undertones with a soft greenish-gray pull underneath. That combination keeps it from reading purely yellow or purely beige. In cooler light the green undertone can surface subtly, nudging the color toward a more muted, natural feel. In warm incandescent or afternoon light the golden quality takes over and the color feels sunnier and cozier.
Where Woven Jacquard Works Best
Woven Jacquard is an interior paint, and its warmth makes it well suited to living rooms, dining rooms, and bedrooms where you want a color that feels settled and inviting rather than bright or stark. It works on all four walls, but it is also a strong candidate for a single accent wall where you want warmth without high contrast. Ceilings in this tone can make a room feel wrapped and intimate, especially in smaller spaces.
Where to put Woven Jacquard
On four walls in a living room with mixed light, Woven Jacquard creates an enveloping warmth that works from morning into evening. Keep trim in a warm white rather than a bright cool white so the contrast stays harmonious rather than jarring.
In a dining room lit by candlelight or a warm-toned chandelier, this color shifts toward honeyed gold and makes the space feel genuinely welcoming. It flatters wood furniture tones and earthy ceramic dishware.
As a bedroom wall color it is restful without being cold or clinical. Pair it with linen textiles and natural wood to lean into its organic, woven quality. Avoid cool grays in the same room, which will fight its warmth.
In a hallway with limited natural light, Woven Jacquard adds warmth that a pale neutral cannot. It makes a transitional space feel purposeful. Use a satin finish so the color stays lively rather than flat.
What to Pair With Woven Jacquard
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for Woven Jacquard 254 at this time. As a general approach, it pairs well with warm off-whites for trim, deep earthy browns or terracottas for contrast, and muted sage or olive greens that share its warm undertone family.
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Colors that clash with Woven Jacquard
If adjacent rooms are painted in cool gray or blue-gray tones, Woven Jacquard can look dingy or yellowed at the transition point rather than warm and deliberate.
A stark, cool bright white on trim and moldings will pull against Woven Jacquard's warmth and make the wall color look more yellow and tired than it actually is.
In a high-gloss finish on a large wall, the golden undertones in this color can become pronounced and the surface reads more intensely than you expect from the chip.
Common questions
The LRV is 66.73, which places it solidly in the light-to-mid range. It reflects a good amount of light, so it will not darken a room significantly, but it is not so light that it disappears on the wall. You will see real color presence without heaviness.
It depends on your light. In warm afternoon sun or incandescent lighting, the golden quality becomes more prominent. In cooler north light or under daylight-balanced LEDs, the muted greenish-gray undertone softens the yellow considerably. Test a large sample in your actual room under your actual light before committing.
Eggshell is the most reliable choice for walls. It gives enough sheen to hold up to cleaning while keeping the color soft and even. Flat works in low-traffic rooms if you want a more matte, textile-like quality that suits the name. Satin is a good call for higher-traffic areas or hallways.
No. This color is listed as interior only in the Benjamin Moore lineup.
