Blue Click
What Blue Click Actually Looks Like
Blue Click reads like a clear, optimistic sky blue, the kind of color you see on a breezy spring morning when the clouds have just cleared. It sits in the light range with an LRV of 63.2, so it reflects a good amount of light without washing out. On a swatch it looks distinctly blue, not muted, not dusty, just a clean and refreshing mid-light blue with enough saturation to make a statement while still feeling easygoing. It is bright enough to keep a room from feeling heavy yet saturated enough that it does not disappear into the trim.
Blue Click Undertones
The primary undertone is a straightforward cool blue, but there is a subtle teal lean that shows up in certain lighting. In north-facing rooms, the coolness intensifies, and it can read a touch more gray-blue. Under warm incandescent light, that slight teal quality comes forward and the color feels a bit more aquatic and lively. Some designers see it as a pure sky blue, while others pick up on that quiet green-blue shimmer, especially when it sits next to warm neutrals. Both reads are accurate depending on your light conditions. What it never does is turn purple or lavender, so you are safe from unwanted warm shifts.
Where Blue Click Works Best
Blue Click works well on bedroom walls where you want a calming, airy feel without going so pale that the color disappears. It is a strong pick for bathrooms, where it plays up the connection to water and feels naturally clean. In living rooms it functions as a cheerful backdrop that pairs easily with white trim and natural wood furniture. It can also hold its own on kitchen walls or a kitchen island, giving the space a coastal or cottage vibe without trying too hard. If you are considering it for an exterior, it makes a charming porch ceiling or a fun accent on shutters. On ceilings indoors, it mimics a soft sky overhead. Avoid using it in rooms that already skew very cool, such as a north-facing space with gray flooring, unless you want the temperature to read intentionally chilly.
Where to put Blue Click
Blue Click turns a bedroom into a retreat. Paint all four walls and let crisp white bedding and natural wood nightstands do the rest. The LRV of 63.2 keeps the room bright enough for morning routines but still feels restful at night under warm lamplight, where that faint teal undertone emerges.
This is one of those colors that feels like it was made for a bathroom. Pair it with white subway tile, chrome fixtures, and a natural wood vanity. It reads fresh and clean without being clinical. In a small powder room, it adds personality without overwhelming the space.
Use Blue Click on an accent wall or go all in on four walls. In a living room it reads upbeat and welcoming, especially alongside warm-toned throw pillows and a jute rug. It works with both modern and traditional furniture, giving the room a relaxed coastal quality.
Blue Click on lower cabinets or a kitchen island is a bold but approachable choice. Keep uppers white and let the blue anchor the bottom half of the room. With butcher block countertops and brass cup pulls, it feels collected and intentional rather than trendy.
What to Pair With Blue Click
Blue Click is straightforward to pair because it sits comfortably in the cool blue family. A crisp white trim is the classic move, and warm whites keep the combination from feeling sterile. Navy or deep indigo accents build depth and keep the palette monochromatic. If you want contrast, bring in warm caramel leather, natural rattan, or brass hardware to balance Blue Click's coolness.
Blue Click vs similar colors
All comparisons are matched against Blue Click at LRV 63.2.
Colors that clash with Blue Click
In a room that gets only northern light, Blue Click can shift from cheerful to icy. The cool undertones compound with the blue-gray light, and the space may feel colder than you intended.
Bold warm accents like terracotta or cherry red can fight with Blue Click's cool clarity, creating a jarring contrast that looks unintentional.
Because Blue Click has that cheerful, almost playful energy, it can read young in a room with formal furniture or dark traditional woodwork.
Common questions
Blue Click has an LRV of 63.2. That puts it solidly in the light range, meaning it reflects a good amount of light and works well in most rooms without feeling washed out or overwhelming.
It reads primarily as a clean sky blue, but a subtle teal undertone can surface depending on your lighting. Under warm incandescent bulbs or in south-facing rooms, the teal leans slightly forward. In cooler light it stays firmly blue.
A crisp white trim is the easiest and most reliable pairing. If you find the combination too stark, try a warm white trim to soften the contrast. Both options let Blue Click stay the clear focal point.
Not at all. With an LRV of 63.2 it is light and airy rather than intense. In the evening under warm lamplight it mellows into a soothing, slightly aquatic tone that supports sleep.
Yes. It makes a great porch ceiling color or shutter accent. Keep in mind that colors typically look lighter and more saturated in direct sunlight, so Blue Click may appear a touch brighter outside than it does on your indoor sample.
