Colour guide

White

White in interiors: Maximises perceived light and cleanliness, but reveals shadow, texture and dirt very clearly.

11 product families 37 options

White appears across 11 product families and 37 options, especially on 3-Seater Sofas, Armchairs, Bar Stools, Decorative Cushions, Dining Tables and Mattress Protectors and 3 more.

White reference image

Visual meaning

White is rarely just absence of colour. Warm whites feel inviting and pair better with beige and oak, while cool whites sharpen black and blue contrasts.

It expands space visually because it reflects the most light, but it also exposes every contour and mark. That makes texture, stitching and material quality more noticeable.

How to pair it

The key to a good white palette is layering tone and texture rather than adding many competing colours. Boucle, oak, matte ceramics, wool and natural stone keep white interiors alive.

Use black or dark brown sparingly as punctuation, not as a second field everywhere. That preserves the lightness while still giving the room definition.

Palette planning cues

Works well with

  • oak
  • beige
  • black
  • stone
  • soft pastel accents

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.