
Dream Catcher
Often used for its bright and airy qualities, Dream Catcher remains a staple for Cloverdale Paint designers. It is widely considered one of the best colors in its class to maximize natural light while maintaining a clean, neutral backdrop. We've gathered 8 real-home scenarios to help you visualize this color alongside our expert data.
Hex
#DBE4DC
LRV
77.00
Dream Catcher's Color Strip
Dream Catcher is the first shade on this 7-color strip, the lightest in this coordinated family. Browsing strip 134 alongside this color helps you gauge whether to go lighter, darker, or stay right here.
Dream Catcher in Real Rooms
Dream Catcher has a high LRV of 77 — it reflects a lot of light and will read pale and airy in most spaces.
1 Bathroom Photo
Using Dream Catcher on a bathroom vanity is a clever way to introduce color without painting the walls. It creates a sophisticated anchor for the room, especially when topped with a thick white quartz or a contrasting dark stone.

Dream Catcher gives this bathroom a clean, considered finish.
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2 Bedroom Photos
There's a rhythmic quality to Dream Catcher in a bedroom. It's a color that supports the circadian rhythm, mirroring the natural shadows of the evening and providing a neutral, non-stimulating canvas for the brain to decompress after a long day of digital exposure.

Dream Catcher sets a calm, restful tone in this bedroom.
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Dream Catcher in a spacious bedroom — see how the color behaves at scale.
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1 Dining Room Photo
Dream Catcher in the dining room sets a tone of warmth and occasion. Whether used on all four walls or as a single statement wall behind a sideboard, it creates the kind of atmosphere that makes every dinner feel like a special event.

Dream Catcher on the dining room walls — a color that makes evenings feel intentional.
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2 Misc Photos
Dream Catcher shows up in some unexpected spaces in these photos — hallways, laundry rooms, and accent walls. Each one makes the case that the color's versatility extends well beyond the obvious applications into every corner of the home.

Dream Catcher in a foyer — the first impression this color makes is a confident one.
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Dream Catcher in a sun-filled room — how this color holds up in direct light.
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1 Kitchen Photo
The challenge with kitchen color is longevity: it needs to look right at 7am under bright task lights and at dinner with the pendants dimmed low. Dream Catcher manages to bridge all three lighting scenarios with ease, which is a rarer quality in a paint pigment than it sounds.

Dream Catcher on the kitchen walls — a backdrop that works without demanding attention.
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1 Living Room Photo
The beauty of Dream Catcher in a living room lies in its versatility with textures. It provides a smooth, matte-like quality that contrasts beautifully against plush velvet sofas or chunky wool rugs. It's a color that invites you to stay a little longer, creating an atmosphere that feels established rather than just decorated.

Dream Catcher on the walls of this living room — warm, grounded, easy to live with.
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