
Caper
Caper is a genuinely dark paint color from Cloverdale Paint. Our real-world data shows it is a primary choice when homeowners need to anchor a room without demanding the spotlight. Below, you'll find 8 examples of this shade in actual homes along with suggested color relationships.
Hex
#5D6359
LRV
11.97
Caper's Color Strip
Caper is the seventh shade on this 7-color strip, the deepest shade in this coordinated family. Strip Ex8 lines up the full value range so you can see exactly where this color lands among its closest relatives.
Caper in Real Rooms
Caper has a low LRV of 11.97 — it absorbs light and reads as a genuinely dark, enveloping color.
1 Bathroom Photo
The interaction between Caper and steam or humidity creates a beautiful, diffused atmosphere in a bathroom. It's a color that feels "alive," shifting slightly in character as the environment changes during a hot shower or a long soak.

The walls here show Caper in bright, well-lit bathroom light.
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2 Bedroom Photos
Lighting is key in a bedroom, and Caper reacts beautifully to dimmers. As you lower the lights for sleep, the color takes on a velvet-like quality, losing its daytime crispness in favor of a smoky, mysterious depth that is incredibly conducive to relaxation.

A bedroom painted in Caper — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
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This open bedroom shows Caper in honest, natural light.
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1 Dining Room Photo
Using Caper in the dining room allows you to go bold with your lighting fixtures. An oversized chandelier or a modern sculptural pendant will look even more dramatic against the rich, steady background of this particular shade.

See Caper in a formal dining setting — composed and quietly present.
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2 Misc Photos
Note how Caper is used as a "ceiling color" in some of these rooms. This "fifth wall" application is a bold designer move that can make a room feel infinitely more cozy and architecturally unique.

A foyer painted in Caper sets the tone for everything beyond it.
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Natural light reveals Caper's true character in this bright sun room.
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1 Kitchen Photo
Kitchens are often the noisiest rooms in the house; Caper provides the visual equivalent of acoustic dampening. Its steady, calm presence helps lower the "volume" of the room, creating a more pleasant environment for cooking and conversation.

This kitchen scene shows how Caper holds up under practical light.
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1 Living Room Photo
Caper anchors the living room with a quiet, architectural confidence. Its depth shifts subtly through the day — cooler in the crisp morning light and significantly warmer by lamplight in the evening — making it a natural fit for a space meant for both high-energy gathering and silent unwinding. To maximize the effect, layer in natural white oak, heavy linen, and soft metallics to let the color truly breathe.

See how Caper holds up in a real living room setting.
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