Scandinavian

Scandinavian paint palettes follow a small set of recurring rules. Scandinavian palettes are very light, very low-saturation, and very honest. They lean cool but include a warm wood note (oak, ash) to keep the room from going clinical. We have catalogued 1 palettes in this style, each one tagged with the rooms it suits and the dominant color family driving its character.

Style does not mean any single color — it means the relationships between colors. A scandinavian palette built on cream and oak has the same character as one built on plaster and ash, because the relationship between the wall and the accent is what defines the look. The full primer on style vs. color in interior paint explains this in more depth.

Use the palettes below as starting points, not finished prescriptions. Most rooms benefit from one swap — replacing the lightest swatch with a slightly warmer or cooler version of itself to match existing flooring or trim. Walking that swap through is the subject of our how-to on adapting a published palette to your own room.

A common pitfall in this style is over-committing to the most photographed example. Every palette below has been tested at multiple lightness/saturation points, so you can pick the one closest to your room rather than the one closest to a magazine cover.

Each palette below links through to a full detail page with the closest commercial paint match for every swatch — Sherwin-Williams, Benjamin Moore, and Behr where available. Use those matches as the bridge between this reading library and your local paint counter.

One last note specific to scandinavian: do not lift a palette wholesale from a photograph without checking the room dimensions and light direction in the original. A palette that sang in a 1930s bungalow with east-facing windows can flatten in a 2010s open-plan living room with a glass slider. The colors are the same; the architecture is not. Use the palettes below as proven starting points and adjust the lightness band by half a step in either direction to match your actual space.

1Palettes in this style
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