Match Winter Mood
PPG Winter Mood is a light-reflective shade with an LRV of 84. The matches below are the closest equivalents available across every brand on Pontata, ranked by ΔE — a perceptual color difference score. A ΔE under 3 is subtle; under 10 is noticeable but harmonious; above 25 means genuinely different colors.
View full Winter Mood color page →Closest matches across every brand
One match per brand, ranked by ΔE — a perceptual color difference score calculated from Lab color space values. Lower is closer. Click any card to compare side by side in simulated rooms.


Their light reflectance is nearly identical (LRV 84 vs 83), so neither reads brighter in a room. A ΔE of 0.4 means the difference barely reads in a finished room.


Their light reflectance is nearly identical (LRV 84 vs 83), so neither reads brighter in a room. A ΔE of 0.6 means the difference barely reads in a finished room.


Timeless reads slightly lighter (LRV 87 vs 84), a gap that shows most in low-lit rooms. At ΔE 0.6 you'd need them side by side to tell them apart.

With LRVs of 84 and 82, the two reflect almost the same amount of light. At ΔE 0.6 you'd need them side by side to tell them apart.


Their light reflectance is nearly identical (LRV 84 vs 84), so neither reads brighter in a room. A ΔE of 0.7 means the difference barely reads in a finished room.

Their light reflectance is nearly identical (LRV 85 vs 84), so neither reads brighter in a room. A ΔE of 0.7 means the difference barely reads in a finished room.


Their light reflectance is nearly identical (LRV 84 vs 84), so neither reads brighter in a room. A ΔE of 0.7 means the difference barely reads in a finished room.


Their light reflectance is nearly identical (LRV 84 vs 82), so neither reads brighter in a room. A ΔE of 0.8 means the difference barely reads in a finished room.


With LRVs of 85 and 84, the two reflect almost the same amount of light. At ΔE 0.9 you'd need them side by side to tell them apart.

With LRVs of 84 and 81, the two reflect almost the same amount of light. At ΔE 1.2 you'd need them side by side to tell them apart.


Their light reflectance is nearly identical (LRV 84 vs 84), so neither reads brighter in a room. A ΔE of 1.5 means the difference barely reads in a finished room.

Whitening reads slightly lighter (LRV 88 vs 84), a gap that shows most in low-lit rooms. At ΔE 2.5 you'd need them side by side to tell them apart.


A 6-point LRV gap (90 vs 84) makes Wimborne White the marginally brighter of the two. A ΔE of 2.6 means the difference barely reads in a finished room.


At LRV 84 vs 70, Winter Mood is decisively the brighter choice. The ΔE 6.7 gap is real but not dramatic — distinct as a choice, harmonious together.

