DIM-4
The DIM-4 palette is a unapologetically saturated, high-contrast collection of 4 interior paint colors built around a terracotta core. Designers reach for combinations like this when they want a bold & dramatic feel that still photographs well in real homes — neither too flat for daylight nor too punchy under warm bulbs. The palette leans softly lit overall, which makes it especially comfortable for a home office where the eye settles for long stretches.
A practical way to use the DIM-4 scheme on walls is to anchor the largest plane in the lightest swatch, carry the mid-tones onto adjacent surfaces such as built-ins or trim, and reserve the darkest swatch for a single accent — a fireplace surround, a single feature wall, the back of a bookcase, or the inside of a cased opening. This 60/30/10 distribution — a rule we explain in our full guide to the 60/30/10 paint rule — keeps the room legible from across the floor while letting the deeper colors do real work as visual punctuation.
On vertical surfaces choose a low-sheen finish so the color absorbs light evenly; reserve any satin or semi-gloss for trim and millwork where you actually want a little reflection. Test the palette under both daylight and your actual evening bulbs. The undertones in a paint chip shift dramatically between cool fluorescent showroom light and warm 2700K LEDs at home.
It pairs naturally with limewashed oak flooring, natural wool textiles, and warm metal hardware in brass or aged bronze. If your floors are cooler in tone, lean on the lighter swatches for walls and let the deeper colors come in through upholstery, drapery, or art — there is a detailed paint-and-flooring pairing reference on this exact problem worth bookmarking.
Stylistically the palette reads bohemian, which is why it is grouped under that aesthetic. The dominant color family is charcoals & blacks, and there are 4 distinct families represented across the palette as a whole — enough variation to layer textiles and art against without the room feeling matched.
Beyond the obvious home office use, this set translates well to a dining room when you want continuity between connected spaces. Repeat one of the lighter swatches across both rooms and shift the accent — the eye reads it as a deliberate, considered home rather than a series of unrelated paint decisions. The mood you should expect is bold & dramatic, which is why we cataloged it under that category. For a fuller treatment of how to translate a digital palette into ordered paint, see our standing walkthrough on color-matching at the paint counter.