Blush & Navy Color Scheme
A soft pink paired with deep navy and a clean white for a look that feels both pretty and grounded. Every shade is matched to real paint you can buy.
By Emily Roberts · DIY Editor & First-Timer's Guide
Start with Powder Blush, a soft, barely-there pink that wraps a space in warmth without going sweet. It sets a calm, welcoming mood that feels gentle in the morning light and cozy after dark. Pink this quiet acts almost like a warm neutral, which is exactly why it loves a strong partner. Bring in a deep, confident blue and the whole scheme snaps into focus.
That partner is Deep Navy, used on trim and built-ins to draw clean lines and give the blush something to lean on. A bit of Bright White keeps things fresh and stops the pairing from feeling heavy, lifting the ceiling and brightening every edge. This trio works almost anywhere, so let it carry a living room, settle a bedroom, or pull a kitchen together with the same easy, put-together charm.
Buy These Colors
Each color matched to the closest real paint in every brand, by ΔE2000. Tap a swatch for its full guide or + to save it — take any SKU to the store, they mix on demand.
Questions
A crisp white is the easy third, and that is exactly what this combo uses. If you want one more, a warm brass or soft gold accent looks lovely against both.
Not with this much navy in the mix. The deep blue keeps things grounded and balanced, so the room reads polished rather than sweet.
Powder Blush leans warm, so pair it with a navy that has a touch of warmth too. A navy that goes too cool or purple can fight the pink instead of flattering it.
Similar Palettes
Closest schemes by color — not by label.