Spoiled Rotten featured
Cloverdale Paint1268

Spoiled Rotten

Spoiled Rotten is a versatile and reflective paint color from Cloverdale Paint. Our real-world data shows it is a primary choice when homeowners need to provide a clean, timeless feel that works across various lighting conditions. Below, you'll find 8 examples of this shade in actual homes along with suggested color relationships.

Hex

#BAC0E4

LRV

54.00

Find matches across brands →
Light Reflectance Value
54.00
Medium
Collection

Spoiled Rotten's Color Strip

Spoiled Rotten is the fourth shade on this 7-color strip, sitting between Casa del Mar and Mood Mode. The strip spans from White Shoulders at the lightest end to Hot Sauna at the deepest. Strip 164 lines up the full value range so you can see exactly where this color lands among its closest relatives.

Spoiled Rotten in Real Rooms

Spoiled Rotten has a medium-high LRV of 54 — present enough to register on the wall without making a room feel heavy.

1 Bathroom Photo

For bathrooms with limited natural light, Spoiled Rotten 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.

Spoiled Rotten 1268 by Cloverdale Paint — Bathroom

The walls here show Spoiled Rotten in bright, well-lit bathroom light.

@visualization

2 Bedroom Photos

For guest bedrooms, Spoiled Rotten 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.

Spoiled Rotten 1268 by Cloverdale Paint — Bedroom

A bedroom painted in Spoiled Rotten — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.

@visualization

Spoiled Rotten 1268 by Cloverdale Paint — Bedroom

This open bedroom shows Spoiled Rotten in honest, natural light.

@visualization

1 Dining Room Photo

Dining rooms are often the best place to take a "color risk." By choosing Spoiled Rotten, 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.

Spoiled Rotten 1268 by Cloverdale Paint — Dining Room

See Spoiled Rotten in a formal dining setting — composed and quietly present.

@visualization

2 Misc Photos

More spaces painted in Spoiled Rotten, 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.

Spoiled Rotten 1268 by Cloverdale Paint — Foyer

A foyer painted in Spoiled Rotten sets the tone for everything beyond it.

@visualization

Spoiled Rotten 1268 by Cloverdale Paint — Sun Room

Natural light reveals Spoiled Rotten's true character in this bright sun room.

@visualization

1 Kitchen Photo

Spoiled Rotten 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.

Spoiled Rotten 1268 by Cloverdale Paint — Kitchen

This kitchen scene shows how Spoiled Rotten holds up under practical light.

@visualization

1 Living Room Photo

Few colors transition as gracefully from day to evening as Spoiled Rotten. 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.

Spoiled Rotten 1268 by Cloverdale Paint — Living Room

See how Spoiled Rotten holds up in a real living room setting.

@visualization

Color Codes

HEX#BAC0E4
RGB186, 192, 228
HSL231° 44% 81%
CIE LabL: 78.9 a: 2.3 b: -17.9
Strip164 pos. 4