2024 paint trends are all over the color charts

Blog

HomeHome / Blog / 2024 paint trends are all over the color charts

Jul 07, 2023

2024 paint trends are all over the color charts

Renew Blue (8003-37D) is a tranquil light blue with a hint of gray green from Valspar. It’s a gimmick. Yet I always fall for it. Every year at this time, paint companies announce their (cue the

Renew Blue (8003-37D) is a tranquil light blue with a hint of gray green from Valspar.

It’s a gimmick. Yet I always fall for it.

Every year at this time, paint companies announce their (cue the drumroll) Color of the Year, or COTY, as insiders call it. They roll out the paint color they most want you to roll on your walls — or ceilings or cabinets. Though I have never actually painted anything a COTY, I eagerly await these announcements, which are like the Oscars for color.

Except, unlike the Oscars, COTYs are not chosen in retrospect. Rather, color judges look at what is going on in the world ─ socially, artistically, politically ─ to divine what will be the next most-coveted color, the one consumers will feel like living with or in. Whether COTYs accurately predict trends is hard to say.

However, what is clear, and more interesting to me than any single paint company’s COTY, is what all the collective COTYs in a given year say about future (and past) color trends.

Behr Paint Company anointed Cracked Pepper (PPU18-01) as its 2024 COTY, describing it as a 'soft black.'

Two years ago, for instance, while the world was in the throes of COVID-19, most paint companies selected a shade of healing green, ranging from teal to olive, as their 2022 COTY. Last year, prominent COTY picks for 2023 were invariably intense saturated tones of teal, brick and charcoal. Nothing wimpy, these colors reflected determination.

This year, the 2024 COTY picks touch all four compass points. We have one light, one dark, one warm and one cool. Equally telling is what’s absent: Gray has had its day.

Although a couple of paint companies have yet to announce their 2024 COTYs, here’s a sampling of the picks so far, along with a little paint speak from their spokespeople.

On the lighter side, Glidden paint by PPG announced Limitless (PPG1091-3) “a fresh, warm hue” that is “anything but yellow.” Color stylists reacting to the COTY pick used the words “pancake” and “bougie beige” to describe the honey-butter hue.

Limitless (PPG1091-3) is a fresh, warm, honey-beige from Glidden paint by PPG.

“This modern neutral is as adaptable as its name implies and is taking the place of cool neutral tones that are so last year,” said Ashley McCollum, PPG’s color expert for Glidden. “With the selection of Limitless, gray is officially canceled.”

That’s not a bad thing.

On the dark side, in striking contrast to Limitless, Behr Paint Co. anointed Cracked Pepper (PPU18-01) as its 2024 COTY. Described as a “soft black,” Cracked Pepper “is a modern color that brings sophistication into any room,” said its news release.

“Cracked Pepper is a color that empowers and elevates your senses, and the way we feel in a space,” said Erika Woelfel, the brand’s vice president of color. “From heightening the aromas of a dining room or the feeling of softness in a living area, Cracked Pepper enhances the natural expression in any space.”

This would take some courage.

On the warm side, HGTV Home by Sherwin-Williams declared Persimmon (HGSW6339) as its 2024 COTY. “A warm, earthy and energetic terracotta shade that combines the elevated energy of tangerine with grounded neutral undertones,” Persimmon pairs well with neutrals or can stand on its own, said its promoters.

"We have seen these tangerine tones emerging in consumer trends and decor and they are having a larger presence in the home,” said Ashley Banbury, the brand’s color marketing manager.

Maybe in small doses.

On the cool side, Valspar deemed Renew Blue (8003-37D), “a tranquil light blue shade with touches of grayed sea green,” as the color for 2024.

Renew Blue emphasizes “control, consistency and equilibrium,” said Sue Kim, Valspar’s director of color marketing. “Our home is a space where we are creating a sense of comfort and slowing down. Renew Blue sets a restful and meditative mood.”

Persimmon (HGSW6339) is a grounded terracotta with touches of tangerine from HGTV Home by Sherwin-Williams.

Maybe in a nursery.

However, if you ask me (and no one did) they all missed it. Fancy forecasting formulas aside, the COTY is … Barbie Pink.

Whatever you think about the colors, the fact is you’re thinking about color, which is exactly what the paint companies want. They also want to encourage you to look beyond your four walls and use paint to color your home creatively.

Here are six outside-the-box ways to do that:

1. TAKE IT OUTSIDE: If a new color feels too daring indoors, try painting your patio or porch with the exterior version of the shade.

2. PAINT THE CEILING: Most rooms have color on the walls and white or cream ceilings. Try flipping that by putting color on the ceiling and leaving walls neutral.

3. COLOR THE CABINETS: We expect white or wood cabinets. However, cabinets painted a definite shade of blue, green, coral or black provide an unexpected and updated change.

4. GO HALFWAY: Think floor-to-ceiling color will be too much? Paint the lower half of a room in a color and leave the upper half neutral.

5. GO ALL IN: Color drenching is the term for painting everything in a room — baseboards, trim, wainscoting, walls, doors and ceiling — the same color.

6. CREATE A PAIRING: Just as certain wine-and-food pairings bring out the best of both, the same is true of colors. Paint companies have palettes of colors curated to go together. Use them as a guide.

Marni Jameson is the author of six home and lifestyle books. She can be reached at www.marnijameson.com.

1. TAKE IT OUTSIDE:2. PAINT THE CEILING:3. COLOR THE CABINETS:4. GO HALFWAY:5. GO ALL IN:6. CREATE A PAIRING: