Grey
Grey in interiors: Creates calm and flexibility, but can flatten a room if every surface sits at the same temperature and value.
Grey appears across 31 product families and 115 options, especially on 3-Seater Sofas, 4-Seater Sofas, Adjustable Beds, Chaise Sofas, Continental Beds and Corner Sofas and 11 more.
Visual meaning
Grey is only neutral at first glance. Warm greys connect easily with beige and oak, while cool greys pair better with black, blue and chrome-like finishes.
Its strength is restraint. Grey allows texture, silhouette and material contrast to become more visible, which is why it works well for large sofas and beds.
How to pair it
The safest grey palette combines at least one warm note and one tactile note. Wood, boucle, wool, linen-look fabrics or off-white walls stop grey-on-grey interiors from going flat.
Think in values: use light grey as the field, medium grey as the bridge and only small dark grey or black notes as anchors. Without value variation the room loses depth.
Palette planning cues
Works well with
- white
- beige
- oak
- black
- dusty blue
Use in the room
Start from undertone before hue intensity. If the colour reads warm, pair it with warm neutrals or a controlled cool counterpoint instead of unrelated cool greys.
Build one dominant field, one bridge neutral and one accent. That is the simplest way to keep a furniture package coherent instead of scattered.
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