Rodda white paint colors
31 white paint colors from the Cascadia + Northwest deck. LRV ranges from 91 (lightest) down to 69 (darkest). Click any swatch to see how it cross-matches at the 10 other US paint brands.
White is the hardest color to specify well. The right white shifts under daylight, north-facing rooms, and warm-LED bulbs — and most "whites" actually have a strong undertone (yellow, pink, green, or blue) that only shows up once it's on the wall. Below: the warm whites and cool whites we recommend most often, organized so you can compare them at a glance.
All 31 white 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 white paint colors by room
17 roomsRooms where white paint commonly works. Each link jumps to that room's curated picks across every brand — Rodda included — so you can compare Rodda white paint colors alongside the alternatives in context.
Other Rodda color families
White paint colors at other US brands
About Rodda white paint colors
What Rodda Whites Actually Look Like
Rodda is the Pacific Northwest's regional pro brand, and its whites read like the place they came from, soft, easy, and free of glare. They come out of the Cascadia signature deck and the Northwest Color Collection, and every one carries an official LRV, which is more rigor than most regional brands bother with.
The family runs from clean to softly grounded. Tinted or Not? (R007) is about as crisp and bright as the deck gets, with Silk (CA002) and Snow White (R008) just below as clean, dependable whites. Step down and the whites warm and soften: Blurred (R010) and Vanilla Soy (R127) read creamy, Greek Pebbles (R004) leans toward a pale greige, and Mist (CA028) anchors the bottom as a soft, foggy off-white that feels right under PNW overcast light.
How to Choose a Rodda White by Light and LRV
LRV (Light Reflectance Value) is a 0 to 100 measure of how much light a color reflects, and Rodda publishes it on every chip, so the number is your fastest filter. Even the softest white in this family stays genuinely light.
Use it to match the room and the famously flat Northwest daylight. For a bright, airy feel in a small or north-facing space, reach for the top with Tinted or Not? (R007) or Silk (CA002). For walls that feel calm and lived-in under gray overcast skies, drop into the lower end with Vanilla Soy (R127), Greek Pebbles (R004), or Mist (CA028), where a little warmth or soft greige keeps the white from going cold. Brush a real sample and check it under your own light before committing, especially under the diffuse PNW daylight these colors were tuned for.
Rodda white paint — frequently asked questions
Are Rodda whites warm or cool?+
They range, but most lean soft and warm rather than stark. Tinted or Not? (R007) is the cleanest and brightest, while Vanilla Soy (R127) reads creamy and Mist (CA028) is a soft foggy off-white. The warmer picks suit the flat, gray Northwest daylight well.
Do Rodda whites have a published LRV?+
Yes. Rodda's Cascadia and Northwest Color Collection palettes carry an official LRV on every color, which is unusual rigor for a regional brand. That makes it easy to compare how bright each white will read before you ever open a can.
Where can I buy a Rodda white?+
Through Rodda's own stores across the Pacific Northwest, roughly 55 locations in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Alaska. Your chosen white is mixed to order, often into the zero-VOC Horizon interior line. Outside the PNW, match the color into a national brand instead.