
Happy Tune
Happy Tune 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
#425E79
LRV
11.00
Happy Tune's Color Strip
Happy Tune is the seventh shade on this 7-color strip, the deepest shade in this coordinated family. Color strip 127 groups these shades together so you can see how each reads next to its neighbors.
Happy Tune in Real Rooms
Happy Tune has a low LRV of 11 — it absorbs light and reads as a genuinely dark, enveloping color.
1 Bathroom Photo
For bathrooms with limited natural light, Happy Tune provides a necessary "glow." It uses its subtle undertones to mimic the warmth of sunlight, preventing the space from feeling subterranean or overly dark, even in windowless layouts.

Happy Tune in a bathroom context — crisp, grounded, dependable.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
For guest bedrooms, Happy Tune is a welcoming embrace. It's a universally appealing tone that feels clean and fresh for new arrivals, yet has enough "personality" to make their stay feel special and considered. It works across all seasons, feeling cool in summer and cozy in winter.

Happy Tune in a children's bedroom: gentle, considered, liveable.
@visualization

Happy Tune fills this airy bedroom without demanding attention.
@visualization
1 Dining Room Photo
Dining rooms are often the best place to take a "color risk." By choosing Happy Tune, you're opting for a shade that is saturated and confident, yet still refined enough to act as a neutral backdrop for colorful table linens and floral arrangements.

Happy Tune adds presence to this dining room without overpowering it.
@visualization
2 Misc Photos
More spaces painted in Happy Tune, shared by homeowners and designers across kitchens, hallways, dining rooms, and beyond. This collection shows how one color can take on a dozen different personalities depending on the room.

Happy Tune on an entryway staircase — grounded, welcoming, assured.
@visualization

Happy Tune in a sun room, where light tests every paint color honestly.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
Happy Tune in a kitchen reads differently from how it might anywhere else — the hard surfaces, task lighting, and constant activity give it more to work against, and it holds up beautifully. It doesn't compete with the colors of food or the texture of countertops; instead, it frames them with a professional finish.

Happy Tune keeps this kitchen feeling open and well-considered.
@visualization
1 Living Room Photo
Few colors transition as gracefully from day to evening as Happy Tune. In natural light, it reads clean, grounded, and modern; by candlelight or lamp, it deepens into something much more soulful. For a living room that needs to function as a bright morning coffee spot and a moody evening lounge, that tonal range is an invaluable asset.

Happy Tune brings quiet confidence to this living room interior.
@visualization

