Iced Mint
Benjamin Moore · 2030-70
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The Analysis
Iced Mint is a high-LRV (89.74) color, meaning it reflects nearly 90% of the light that hits it. It will make small or dim rooms feel significantly larger and more open by pushing the walls back visually.
This is best used as a main wall color in spaces where you want a bright, neutral-adjacent base. Because it has a slight green undertone, it serves as a great bridge between a sterile white and a more colorful palette.
LRV 90History & Origin
This is a distinctly modern choice. It lacks the heavy saturation of traditional period colors, aligning instead with contemporary design that favors clean lines and airy atmospheres.
How to Use It
It excels in bathrooms or laundry rooms where you want a spotless feel. Pair it with matte black hardware for a high-contrast look, or keep it soft by using light white oak wood tones.
The Mood
Living with this shade feels clinical yet refreshing, providing a crisp and clean environment. It is mentally stimulating without being overwhelming, making it an excellent choice for areas where you need to stay alert and organized.
Colour harmonies
Complementary
Opposite on the colour wheel — bold, high-contrast pairings. Use for a feature wall or furniture you want to command attention.
Analogous
Neighbouring hues — cohesive and calm, great for layered schemes that feel collected rather than matched.
Split complementary
Near-opposites for strong contrast with a little less tension than a pure complement. A favourite of interior designers.
Triadic
Three evenly spaced hues — balanced, vibrant, and versatile. Keep one dominant and use the others sparingly.
Tetradic (square)
Four hues in a square on the wheel — rich, dynamic palettes. Best when one colour leads and the others accent.
Monochromatic
Dark, mid, and light steps on the same hue — a failsafe gradient for trim, walls, and accents without shifting colour family.
Add harmony palette to a room
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Brand Matches
Perceptually similar colours from across all brands in our database.
Lighting
See how this colour shifts across natural and artificial light conditions.
- Natural
- Morning
- Afternoon
- Evening
- Overcast
- 2700K
- 3500K
- 4000K
- 5500K