Dimity
Hague Blue
Georgian None #E9DFCC #3A4D5F

Georgian Living Room with Dimity Walls and Hague Blue Trim

A Dimity living room wrapped in Hague Blue joinery is the quintessential Georgian interior pairing — the soft, pink-tinged off-white that Farrow & Ball Dimity No.2008 evokes was developed precisely to...

Before / After Preview

Before — facade without Dimity + Hague Blue (Georgian)
Before
After — facade in Dimity (None) with Hague Blue on the trim, door and shelving (Georgian)
After

Understanding This Colour Harmony

A Dimity living room wrapped in Hague Blue joinery is the quintessential Georgian interior pairing — the soft, pink-tinged off-white that Farrow & Ball Dimity No.2008 evokes was developed precisely to flatter the tall proportions, deep skirting and generous coving of Georgian terraces from Bath and Bloomsbury to Edinburgh's New Town. On walls above a dado rail, Dimity throws a warm, candle-lit glow that makes lime plaster and hand-run cornicing read as they did in the eighteenth century, without the yellow cast of stronger creams. Against this backdrop, Hague Blue No.30 on the architrave, skirting, panelled door and alcove bookshelves flanking the fireplace behaves almost like a near-black: under daylight it reveals its inky teal depth, while firelight draws out the green undertone and frames the chimneypiece as the room's natural focal point. The dark joinery also lengthens the Georgian sash windows visually, reinforcing the vertical rhythm of 9-over-9 or 6-over-6 glazing bars that defines the period.

Technical Colour Details

Property Facade Trim, door and shelving
Colour Name Dimity Hague Blue
HEX #E9DFCC #3A4D5F
RGB 233, 223, 204
RAL None
Element Walls / Facade Trim, door and shelving
Style Georgian
Dimity
#E9DFCC
Hague Blue
#3A4D5F

Colour Technical Profile

LRV
87.7
Hue
39°
Saturation
40%
Lightness
86%

In HSL coordinates, Dimity sits at hue 39°, saturation 40%, and lightness 86%. That places it among the warm tones with high saturation, close to the RAL reference None. UK heritage-paint specialists such as Farrow and Ball Exterior Eggshell, Little Greene Masonry Paint, Sandtex 365 offer breathable masonry and eggshell formulations in this colour family — the closest matches available without a bespoke tint.

The Light Reflectance Value (LRV) calculates to 87.7 using the WCAG relative-luminance formula (0.2126·R + 0.7152·G + 0.0722·B). LRV drives two practical outcomes for any exterior: how much solar heat the walls absorb, and whether the colour is compatible with exterior insulation finish systems (EIFS in the US, external wall insulation in the UK). At LRV 87.7 the facade reflects most incident light — a plus for cooling loads in hot climates, but watch for glare on south-facing elevations and gradual yellowing. Choose a paint with high titanium-dioxide load and strong UV inhibitors.

The mathematical complement (180° across the hue wheel) lands on a steel blue — best reserved for a small accent such as a door or mailbox rather than the main field. The existing accent of Hague Blue (#3A4D5F) sits at a controlled contrast ratio that grounds the composition without breaking it up.

Expert Tips

Use Farrow & Ball Estate Emulsion on the walls for that signature chalky, powdery finish Dimity is known for, and specify Estate Eggshell (not gloss) on all Hague Blue joinery so the blue reads as velvet rather than plastic. Paint the inside of the alcove shelving in Hague Blue too — it makes leather-bound books, brass candlesticks and blue-and-white china pop without competing with the fireplace. Keep the ceiling a shade lighter than Dimity (Wimborne White or Strong White work well) to preserve the coving's crisp shadow line, and carry Hague Blue onto the front of the panelled door as well as the reveal for a proper Georgian-townhouse feel.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Don't pair Dimity with a cool, navy-blue trim such as Stiffkey Blue or Railings — the pink undertone of the walls will clash and the joinery will look harsh rather than characterful. Avoid painting the coving and ceiling rose in Hague Blue; heavy dark colour overhead collapses Georgian proportions and makes the room feel squat. Never skip a tinted primer under Hague Blue on new MDF skirting or architrave — without it you'll need four or five coats to kill the patchiness. And resist white uPVC sash replacements: if you must change the windows, spray or factory-finish them in Hague Blue to match the joinery.

Ideal Home Styles

Georgian townhouse Regency terrace period drawing room panelled sitting room listed building restoration Bath stone interior

Where This Combination Works Best

Architectural Match

The Georgian style is tailored to the following home types: Georgian townhouse, Regency terrace, period drawing room, panelled sitting room, listed building restoration, Bath stone interior. On Victorian bays, Edwardian semis and Cotswold stone cottages this pairing reads as historically considered — matching well with sash windows, slate roofs and cast-iron rainwater goods. Use a breathable masonry paint to protect solid-wall construction.

Climate & Orientation

With an LRV of 87.7, this is a highly reflective colour: excellent for hot climates (southern England, London heat-island) where it materially reduces cooling loads. Guard against glare on south elevations and inspect shaded walls annually for algal streaking.

Urban & Regulatory Context

Before painting, check whether your property falls within a Conservation Area, is Listed, or is subject to an Article 4 direction — any of these can remove permitted development rights for exterior colour changes, making Listed Building Consent or planning permission mandatory. On new-build estates, estate-agreement covenants often restrict exterior colours for the first ten to fifteen years. This georgian palette is typically well received by planning officers in conservation areas because it aligns with heritage-paint conventions, but always submit a colour sample and product data sheet with any application to avoid enforcement action.

Frequently Asked Questions

What colours are used in this combination?

This combination pairs Dimity (#E9DFCC, None) on the walls with Hague Blue (#3A4D5F) on the trim, door and shelving. The style is Georgian.

What style of home suits this combination?

This colour scheme is ideal for: Georgian townhouse, Regency terrace, period drawing room, panelled sitting room, listed building restoration, Bath stone interior.

How can I test this combination on my home?

Upload a photo of your facade to FacadeColorizer and apply these exact colours using our AI-powered simulator. It takes less than 30 seconds and is free to try.

What are the RAL and HEX references for these colours?

The facade colour Dimity has the reference None (HEX: #E9DFCC, RGB: 233, 223, 204). The accent colour Hague Blue has the HEX code #3A4D5F.

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