Untitled FAFBDE
Untitled FAFBDE (#FAFBDE) is a pale, highly saturated shade of yellow. In paint terms it sits in the balanced family with HSL values of 62°, 78%, 93%, which means it behaves predictably in interiors — a warm yellow edge in afternoon sun — without going chalky or muddy when the wall is large.
The closest commercially available paint matches are Sherwin-Williams Carambola (SW 9667, #EFEBD1); Benjamin Moore Barely Yellow (2025-70, #F7F8DB); Behr Modest White (BWC-12, #EFE8D6). These are the nearest swatches by Lab-color distance — your local paint counter can custom-mix the exact hex if none of them are close enough.
On trim and millwork in a typical home office, Untitled FAFBDE reads as a confident, pale color rather than a background. It holds its character at scale, so test a 24×24 inch board on the wall before committing — a step covered in our paint-sampling checklist — because the chip in your hand will always look slightly different from the same color spread across forty square feet.
Pair Untitled FAFBDE with inky charcoals, raw wood tones, and unpolished brass hardware for a layered, lived-in look. If you prefer something cleaner and more contemporary, drop the wood and let it sit against bright whites and matte black fixtures — there is a side-by-side reference of warm vs. cool styling that walks through both directions.
For trim alongside this color, choose a white that shares its undertone rather than a generic builder white — otherwise the trim will read dingy by comparison.
A short way to remember Untitled FAFBDE: restful enough for a bedroom, confident enough for a foyer. That single sentence is usually enough to decide whether to pin it to your moodboard or move on to the next swatch.
Where Untitled FAFBDE tends to fail is in rooms it was never asked about. A yellow designed for a calm bedroom can read sluggish in a kitchen with bright daylight pouring through a sliding door, and a color that anchors a moody dining room can disappear in a long, north-facing hallway. The fix is rarely to abandon the color — it is to use it on a smaller surface, or to lift the lightness by a single step. Both adjustments are inexpensive once you understand what the color is doing.