A craze for pastel wall paints is gripping fancy households, but they are not the saccharine tones common of baby nurseries.
Here enters the dirty pastel palette, a spectrum that includes dusty rose, mucky light green, grimy ice blue and oxidized lilac tones. The colors, which can look like a pastel that has taken a too-large dose of colloidal silver, are often mixed with dabs of gray, black or ocher and are prized for casting a moody, enveloping effect.
Tastemakers from the self-care and fashion worlds are opting to live in pastel-frosted homes. The colors have even made appearances outside domestic life: They were favorite backdrops for exhibitors at the European Fine Art Foundation fair in New York City in May; recently, the Brooklyn apartment of Tony Liu, co-founder of the fashion industry Instagram account Diet Prada, went viral for its decadent design and allover pastel use; and models slinked down Prada’s runway show during Milan Fashion Week against a wall that reflected somber pinks and blues.
Their growing popularity could signal a tiptoe toward more colorful living spaces after taupes, grays and whites drove the look of U.S. households for at least a decade.
“They feel a lot more adult and elegant,” said Leanne Kilroy, an American interior designer in London who also writes a Substack newsletter about home decorating. She likened the colors to a new neutral, particularly when painted across the majority of rooms and hallways in a single residence.
Lauren Geremia, a designer who said she used the tones liberally in recent projects in San Francisco and New York for her firm, Geremia Design, added that this can make a space feel “like a vintage photograph, a little hard to place time-wise.”
The colors evoke a sense of refined taste, not only for those who use them but also for how they are sold. In their marketing, popular luxury paint companies have said that certain dirty pastel shades replicate the look of historic palaces and estates, further bolstering the colors’ air of suitability for high-end spaces.
Paint labels that are regarded for their selection of dirty pastel colors often exceed $130 per gallon. Among them are Mylands, Little Greene and Farrow & Ball, as well as Alkemis, a Los Angeles “wellness paint” company that uses ground crystal quartz in its base.