Rodda gray paint colors
93 gray paint colors from the Cascadia + Northwest deck. LRV ranges from 71 (lightest) down to 7 (darkest). Click any swatch to see how it cross-matches at the 10 other US paint brands.
Gray is the most-recommended neutral in American interiors — the safe choice that anchors a room without committing to a strong color. The "true" grays here lean cool (blue or violet undertone) or stay almost dead-neutral. The warm-leaning grays (taupe, mushroom, greige) live in the Neutral family next door because they read closer to beige than to true gray on the wall.
All 93 gray paint colors from Rodda
Grouped by undertone (warm → cool)Hex values are display approximations from Rodda's published swatch tools — not guaranteed to match a physical sample under controlled lighting. Order a brand-direct sample before specifying.
Rodda gray paint colors by room
19 roomsRooms where gray paint commonly works. Each link jumps to that room's curated picks across every brand — Rodda included — so you can compare Rodda gray paint colors alongside the alternatives in context.
Other Rodda color families
Gray paint colors at other US brands
About Rodda gray paint colors
What Rodda Grays Are Really Like
Gray is a natural fit for a Pacific Northwest brand, and Rodda's grays read like the misty, foggy skies the Cascadia deck was named for. They come with an official LRV on every chip, and the undertones run quietly cool to soft green rather than stark.
The family covers the full range. Moonstone (CA181) is a light, airy gray at the top, with Clear Skies (CA189) as a soft mid-light. The middle holds the working grays: Verdigris (CA185) leans green, Patina (CA190) and Buried Fossil (R057) read as easy mid-grays, and Harbour Grey (CA195) carries a soft blue cast. The deep end gets moody, with December Sky (R094) and Moody Hue (R105) as shadowy mid-darks, and Deep Well (R101), Shale (CA192), and Meraki (R108) anchoring the bottom as near-charcoal grays.
How to Choose a Rodda Gray by Light and LRV
LRV (Light Reflectance Value) is a 0 to 100 scale of how light or dark a color reads, and gray shifts with the light more than any other family, so the number matters most here. Rodda prints it on every chip, which makes the choice easier.
For a bright, open wall, look high with Moonstone (CA181) or Clear Skies (CA189). For a soft mid-gray with presence, sit with Verdigris (CA185), Patina (CA190), or Harbour Grey (CA195), watching whether you want the green or the blue undertone. When you want depth, drop to December Sky (R094) or Moody Hue (R105), and reach for Deep Well (R101), Shale (CA192), or Meraki (R108) when you want near-charcoal walls, a moody accent, or a strong door. Under the flat PNW daylight these were built for, always brush a sample and check it morning and night before ordering.
Rodda gray paint — frequently asked questions
Do Rodda grays have undertones?+
Yes, mostly quiet ones. Verdigris (CA185) leans green, Harbour Grey (CA195) carries a soft blue cast, and the foggier Cascadia grays read calm and muted. Each chip's official LRV and the named undertone help you pick the lane you want.
Which Rodda gray works for a dark, dramatic wall?+
Look at the deep end of the family. Deep Well (R101), Shale (CA192), and Meraki (R108) are near-charcoal grays that make strong picks for an accent wall, cabinetry, or a front door. Their low LRV means they absorb light and read moody.
Why does my gray look different at night?+
Gray shifts more than any other family as the light changes, which is exactly why Rodda's foggy Cascadia grays were tuned for flat Northwest daylight. Always brush a real sample on the wall and check it in morning daylight and under your evening bulbs before committing.