Petticoat vs Casa Blanca
Where Petticoat belongs to Cloverdale Paint's range, Casa Blanca is a Sherwin-Williams color. Both sit in the beige family, which is useful context if you're narrowing within a single hue direction. Petticoat (LRV 79) reflects noticeably more light than Casa Blanca (LRV 76), a difference of 3 points that becomes especially apparent in rooms with limited natural light. At ΔE 0.9, these are close — the kind of difference that matters when choosing between them, but doesn't read strongly in a finished room. Below you'll find 2 real-room photo comparisons where both colors appear side by side, plus 5 simulated room previews.
Petticoat vs Casa Blanca in Real Spaces
2 real rooms side by side. Petticoat and Casa Blanca are close enough that the difference can be hard to judge from a chip alone — these photos show how each reads at scale, across different spaces and lighting conditions.
Living Room
In a living room, color works across both daylight and evening light — the same wall can read very differently at noon and at 8pm. The two are close enough that the choice comes down to finer qualities — undertone, texture, what the color sits next to.
Bathroom
Bathrooms are one of the few spaces where you're genuinely enclosed by the paint color, which makes the choice between these two more consequential. At this scale the difference is subtle — you'd need them side by side, as shown here, to reliably tell them apart.
Color Details
Petticoat vs Casa Blanca Simulated Comparison
5 simulated room previews — drag the slider on each to see Petticoat on one side and Casa Blanca on the other.
Digital color is approximate. These simulations are generated from the manufacturer's hex values and overlaid on grayscale room photos — your screen's calibration, brightness, and viewing angle all affect how they render. Before committing to either color, test physical samples in your own space under the light you actually live with.
More Petticoat comparisons
See how Petticoat stacks up against other well-photographed colors across different brands and tones.












































