Photo: @visualization2 Bedroom Photos
For guest bedrooms, Stargazer 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.
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Bedroom walls in Stargazer create an intimate, restful sleeping environment.
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2 Bedroom Photos
Stairway to Heaven has a unique ability to make a bedroom feel larger yet more intimate at the same time. By softening the "edges" of the room, the walls seem to move back, while the warmth of the tone makes the bed feel like a safe, protected island in the center of the space.
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A bedroom painted in Stairway to Heaven — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
Pairing Spacebox 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.
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Spacebox sets a calm, restful tone in this bedroom.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
Pairing Sparrow 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.
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A bedroom painted in Sparrow — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
To use Soul Train in a bedroom is to lean into the concept of "soft minimalism." It provides enough visual interest that you don't need a lot of wall decor; the color itself becomes the art. This allows for a clutter-free environment that is essential for mental clarity at the end of the day.
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Soul Train in a children's bedroom: gentle, considered, liveable.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
For guest bedrooms, Stardust Ballroom 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.
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Stardust Ballroom in a children's bedroom: gentle, considered, liveable.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
Pairing Southern Belle 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.
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Southern Belle sets a calm, restful tone in this bedroom.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
A bedroom finished in Stone rewards the time you spend in it. The color is deep enough to feel intentional and luxurious, but not so saturated that it becomes visually tiring over time — it strikes the perfect balance for a space meant for both deep sleep and the slow, reflective hours before it.
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A bedroom painted in Stone — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
In the context of a primary suite, Spring Green suggests a boutique-hotel level of refinement. It creates a seamless flow between the sleeping area and the dressing room, providing a steadying influence that makes the morning routine feel more organized and serene.
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Spring Green sets a calm, restful tone in this bedroom.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
There's a rhythmic quality to Spruce in a bedroom. It's a color that supports the circadian rhythm, mirroring the natural shadows of the evening and providing a neutral, non-stimulating canvas for the brain to decompress after a long day of digital exposure.
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A bedroom painted in Spruce — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
In the context of a primary suite, Steel suggests a boutique-hotel level of refinement. It creates a seamless flow between the sleeping area and the dressing room, providing a steadying influence that makes the morning routine feel more organized and serene.
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A bedroom painted in Steel — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
Spur creates a bedroom that feels deliberately calm rather than accidentally plain. The color absorbs the first rays of morning light without bouncing them back harshly, which means waking up in this environment feels gentle and gradual. Keep the window treatments simple and let the walls do the heavy lifting.
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Spur in a children's bedroom: gentle, considered, liveable.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
To use Spinning Clay in a bedroom is to lean into the concept of "soft minimalism." It provides enough visual interest that you don't need a lot of wall decor; the color itself becomes the art. This allows for a clutter-free environment that is essential for mental clarity at the end of the day.
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A bedroom painted in Spinning Clay — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
For guest bedrooms, Soot 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.
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A bedroom painted in Soot — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
@visualization
2 Bedroom Photos
Lighting is key in a bedroom, and Stardust reacts beautifully to dimmers. As you lower the lights for sleep, the color takes on a velvet-like quality, losing its daytime crispness in favor of a smoky, mysterious depth that is incredibly conducive to relaxation.
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A bedroom painted in Stardust — soft-spoken and easy to wake up to.
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