Hirshfield's green paint colors
100 green paint colors from the Historic Collection deck. LRV ranges from 81 (lightest) down to 10 (darkest). Click any swatch to see how it cross-matches at the 10 other US paint brands.
Green has quietly replaced grey as the safe-but-interesting wall color of the late 2020s. Sage Green, the soft grey-green that became the de facto fallback, anchors the family — but the broader green palette runs from olive (warm, earthy, faintly yellow) to forest (deep blue-green) to emerald (saturated jewel tone).
All 100 green paint colors from Hirshfield's
Grouped by undertone (warm → cool)Hex values are display approximations from Hirshfield's's published swatch tools — not guaranteed to match a physical sample under controlled lighting. Order a brand-direct sample before specifying.
Hirshfield's green paint colors by room
20 roomsRooms where green paint commonly works. Each link jumps to that room's curated picks across every brand — Hirshfield's included — so you can compare Hirshfield's green paint colors alongside the alternatives in context.
Other Hirshfield's color families
Green paint colors at other US brands
About Hirshfield's green paint colors
What Hirshfield's Greens Actually Look Like
Green is one of the strongest families in the Historic collection, and the character is sage, olive, and muted leaf rather than bright kelly. The heritage names carry the look: Amish Green is a deep, grounded forest green, Bristol Green and Whispering Willow are soft, grayed sages, and Picholine and Grasshopper lean toward dusty olive. Lighter members like Green Bonnet and Marrett Apple read as gentle, leafy greens, while Hawthorne settles into a calm pale sage. These are warm, restrained, period-correct greens, the kind drawn from nature and proven on old houses, and they suit a Minnesota landscape where deep evergreens and faded summer fields are the backdrop. As a family-owned regional deck, Hirshfield's leans into exactly these aged garden tones that flatter a farmhouse, a Craftsman, or a cabin.
How to Choose a Hirshfield's Green
Greens read very differently by depth, so start with the published LRV. For light, airy walls pick a soft sage in the 50s or higher like Belladonna's Leaf or a leafy Marrett Apple; for a moody library, cabinetry, or a front door, drop into the teens and 20s with Amish Green or Pendula Garden. Pin down the undertone: many Hirshfield's greens carry a gray or gold note, so Bristol Green reads quiet and grayed while Green Bonnet stays clearer and leafier. Green shifts with surrounding foliage, looking richer near a window onto a garden, so test it where it will live. A south room can carry a deep sage without darkening, while a cooler north room usually wants a higher-LRV, warmer green to stay inviting.
Hirshfield's green paint — frequently asked questions
What kind of greens does Hirshfield's specialize in?+
Soft sages, olives, and muted leaf greens, which suit the heritage character of the collection. Bristol Green and Whispering Willow are grayed sages, while Amish Green anchors the deep end, all reading more aged and natural than a bright modern green.
Which green works as a calm whole-room color?+
A soft, higher-LRV sage is the easiest choice for full walls. Belladonna's Leaf and the lighter leafy picks stay gentle and livable, where a deep forest green like Amish Green is better suited to a moody accent or cabinetry.
Do these greens lean gray or yellow?+
It varies by color. Bristol Green and Whispering Willow carry a grayed, dusty cast, while Green Bonnet and Picholine push more toward leafy or olive gold, so brush a sample to see which lean shows up in your light.