
Hideaway
Often used for its genuinely dark qualities, Hideaway remains a staple for Cloverdale Paint designers. It is widely considered one of the best colors in its class to anchor a room without demanding the spotlight. We've gathered 8 real-home scenarios to help you visualize this color alongside our expert data.
Hex
#6B5145
LRV
10.00
Hideaway's Color Strip
Hideaway is the seventh shade on this 7-color strip, the deepest shade in this coordinated family. As part of strip 5, these colors are curated to work together — helpful when you're deciding how light or deep to go.
Hideaway in Real Rooms
Hideaway has a low LRV of 10 — it absorbs light and reads as a genuinely dark, enveloping color.
1 Bathroom Photo
Pairing Hideaway with natural stone like travertine or slate creates an earthy, elemental bathroom that feels connected to nature. It moves the design away from plastic-heavy modernism toward something much more timeless and tactile.

The walls here show Hideaway in bright, well-lit bathroom light.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
Pairing Hideaway with tonal textures—like a silk rug or a bouclé chair—creates a layered, monochromatic look that is the height of sophistication for a bedroom. It proves that you don't need high-contrast colors to create a room that feels high-design and deeply personal.

A bedroom painted in Hideaway — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
@visualization

This open bedroom shows Hideaway in honest, natural light.
@visualization
1 Dining Room Photo
The color Hideaway has a way of making wood furniture look its best. Whether you have a dark mahogany table or a light oak sideboard, the undertones of the paint will pull out the natural beauty and grain of the wood.

See Hideaway in a formal dining setting — composed and quietly present.
@visualization
2 Misc Photos
These "miscellaneous" applications of Hideaway prove that there is truly no room in the house that wouldn't benefit from its sophisticated, grounded, and endlessly adaptable presence.

A foyer painted in Hideaway sets the tone for everything beyond it.
@visualization

Natural light reveals Hideaway's true character in this bright sun room.
@visualization
1 Kitchen Photo
On kitchen walls, Hideaway adds a considered, intentional feel without demanding too much attention in a busy space. It holds its own against both warm wood countertops and cool quartz or marble, making it an incredibly flexible choice for the hardest-working and most high-traffic room in the house.

This kitchen scene shows how Hideaway holds up under practical light.
@visualization
1 Living Room Photo
Hideaway works harder than it looks in a living room environment. Whether the space gets direct southern sun or stays north-facing and dim, the color finds its specific register — neither receding into the background nor demanding the spotlight. It acts as a sophisticated backdrop that makes every piece of furniture or art placed in front of it look immediately more considered and curated.

See how Hideaway holds up in a real living room setting.
@visualization

