Between the Layers | Design Guide Series
SUBSCRIBE
Design

The Best Blue Paint Colors I’ve Ever Used

Blue is one of the most requested colors in our projects, and also one of the trickiest to get right.

We used 2 parts De Nimes by Farrow & Ball  with one part Off-Black by Farrow & Ball for our den at the Sixth Street bungalow, and it’s a perfect example of how a blue can feel grounded, layered, and livable when chosen intentionally. It’s not just about liking a color chip. In fact, in this case I wanted something “in- between.” De Nimes just wasn’t reading as rich as I wanted, whereas Off-Black was a bit too dark … so, we custom mixed! It’s about how that color shows up in a real space, at different times of day, against real materials.

A moody, refined living room with deep blue-green walls, a classic white fireplace mantel, antique wood furniture, and warm brass accents, layered with soft textiles and vintage artwork for a timeless, collected feel.

What Most People Don’t Think About When Choosing Blue Paint

1. Blue shifts more than almost any other color

Blue is extremely reactive to light.

It can read:

  • gray in low light
  • green in natural light
  • almost navy at night

A color you love on a swatch can feel completely different on your walls.

Designer note: Always test blue on multiple walls and look at it morning, afternoon, and night. This is non-negotiable with blue. The Sampilize paint swatches make this so easy to do!

A light-filled kitchen with soft sage cabinetry, a large paneled island, white countertops, and brass fixtures, styled with fresh greenery and produce for a layered, inviting, and lived-in feel.
Design: Clouz Houz | Photography: Emily Kennedy

2. Your fixed finishes will pull the undertone

This is where most people miss the mark. Your flooring, countertops, tile, and even hardware will influence how your blue reads.

  • Warm woods → can make blue feel slightly green
  • Cool marble → can make blue feel crisp or flat
  • Brass → softens and warms a blue
  • Chrome/nickel → sharpens it

You’re not picking a blue in isolation … you’re picking a blue that’s in conversation with everything else.

A tailored kitchen with deep blue cabinetry, a dramatic marble slab backsplash, warm wood shelving, and a large stainless steel range, layered with natural textures and brass accents for a refined, functional space.
Design: Clouz Houz

3. Depth matters more than color

People focus on “which blue” when they should be asking “how deep.” We often choose depth based on how we want the room to feel, not just the color itself.

  • Lighter blues = airy, casual, sometimes coastal
  • Mid-tones = soft, livable, easiest to work with
  • Deep blues = dramatic, grounding, but need balance

The Best Blue Paint Colors I’ve Used

De Nimes – Farrow & Ball

A paneled room painted in a muted blue-gray with detailed wall molding, brass hardware, warm wood floors, and a traditional framed artwork creating a layered, classic feel.
Design: @aglassofbovino

Smoky Blue – Sherwin Williams

A styled vignette with a deep dusty blue wall, dark wood console table, brass candlesticks, and neutral decor highlighting the richness of the paint color.

Morning at Sea – Sherwin Williams

A bathroom with blue paneled walls, a warm wood vanity, brass fixtures, and a geometric tile floor, balancing classic materials with a bold color choice.
Design: Maison De Pax

Wedgwood Gray – Benjamin Moore

A light, airy entryway with soft blue walls, a darker built-in bench, woven textures, and natural light creating contrast between tones.

Hague Blue – Farrow & Ball

A deep navy built-in office with cabinetry, warm wood desk, brass lighting, and layered textures for a tailored, sophisticated look.
Design: Elizabeth Reich

Off Black – Farrow & Ball

Stiffkey Blue – Farrow & Ball

A dark, moody blue hallway with paneled walls, arched doorway, and natural light creating contrast against the deep color.
Design: Chris Loves Julia

Light Blue – Farrow & Ball

A soft, pale blue bedroom with classic wall molding, warm wood door, brass sconces, and layered neutral bedding for a calm, timeless feel.

Closing Thoughts

I used to think paint was a finishing touch. Now, it’s often where we start. The right blue can carry a room more than any furniture ever could, but only if it’s chosen with intention.

If you’ve ever picked a color you loved and it still felt off, it’s not you. It’s the layers behind it.

That’s where we come in. If you’re ready for a space that actually feels right, we’d love to help. Explore our services here!

Join the Conversation

get inspired
#clouzhouz
follow along
@clouz_houz
This breakfast nook is a perfect example of why I believe a good design plan can actually help you spend smarter, not more.

We intentionally paired a more affordable lacquer dining table with timeless wicker dining chairs and a statement light fixture. By saving in one area, we were able to invest where it mattered most. The end result still feels layered, custom, and collected because every decision was made with the bigger picture in mind.

That’s one of the biggest misconceptions about hiring a designer. People assume we’re here to encourage a bigger budget.

Honestly, we’re here to educate you where to save so you can spend on the things that matter the most.

Knowing where to invest, where to save, and how those decisions work together is what keeps a project feeling intentional—and helps avoid expensive mistakes later.

I think a lot of people assume they need to wait until they have more money, or the entire house figured out before getting started. But I’ve found the opposite is often true. One thoughtful plan for one room creates momentum for everything that follows.

If you’ve been putting off a room because you don’t know where to begin (or you’re worried about making the wrong decisions), we’d love to help.

Comment “PLAN” and I’ll send you the link to schedule a one-hour consultation so we can kick your project off on the right foot.
When we first started designing our primary suite at the Sixth Street Bungalow, these were the images I kept coming back to. A bathroom that feels collected over time. A bedroom that feels quiet and restorative. Spaces with character, warmth, and a sense of permanence.

I’ve always believed that the best design starts there-not with a specific tile or paint color, but with how you want a space to feel when you walk into it.

The funny thing about renovation is that the vision is usually the easy part. The middle is where the work happens. The demolition. The decisions. The samples spread across every surface. The moments when you’re trying to imagine beautiful spaces while standing in a construction zone. We’re still very much in that season.
Choosing flooring. Finalizing cabinetry details. Adjusting lighting plans. Working through tile layouts.

Making hundreds of small decisions that most people will never notice individually, but together create the feeling we’ve been chasing from the beginning.

I’ve learned through the years that beautiful homes are rarely the result of one dramatic design decision.
They’re built through thoughtful choices, made over and over again.

We’re sharing much more of this renovation journey over on Substack-the sourcing, the design decisions. the changes, the lessons learned, and all the behind-the-scenes moments that don’t always make it to Instagram.

I’d love for you to follow along.
Comment “PIN” and I’ll send over tonight’s Design Board when it goes live. Or find it later in Between the Layers through the link in our bio.

I think people assume designers spend all day choosing furniture. The truth is, we spend a lot more time studying why certain rooms stay with us.

Why one staircase feels timeless.
Why a stripe can completely change the feeling of a room.
Why adding one modern piece to a traditional home suddenly makes everything else fee more interesting.

That’s what this month’s Design Board explores. It’s a peek inside the ideas shaping our work long before they become finished rooms. Some may be having a moment. But I have a feeling they’ll be just as beautiful ten years from now. That’s always the goal.

Fair warning: you may leave wanting to tent a room. I can’t be held responsible.
This is your sign to finally create a plan for the room you’ve been avoiding.

I think a lot of people assume they need to wait.
Until they have more time.
More money.
A bigger budget.
The entire house figured out.

But I’ve found the opposite is often true... Sometimes all it takes is creating a vision for one space.

One room that feels calmer.
More functional.
More beautiful.
More like you.

Because a home isn’t transformed all at once. It’s shaped through a series of thoughtful decisions over time.

If you’ve been circling the same room for months and aren’t sure what to do next, comment ‘PLAN” (or visit our website to get started) and I’ll send you the link to schedule a one-hour consultation.