Ref. #BAA27A · N270-4
What color is Oxford Street? It's a medium warm orange with the hex code #BAA27A. Colors similar to Oxford Street include Valspar Glowing Dune, Benjamin Moore Spice Gold, Vista Paint Season Finale. Oxford Street has a neutral undertone, which affects how it pairs with trim, flooring, and adjacent wall colors. Its LRV of 38 gives Oxford Street depth without going dark, which makes it a strong choice for accent walls, libraries, and rooms with abundant natural light. Pair it with warm whites like White Dove, white oak floors, and unlacquered brass or copper hardware. Terracotta tile or deep green plants complete an earthy warm palette. Oranges glow under 2700K warm bulbs, deepening into rich amber. Under 4000K cool light they can lose warmth and shift toward beige — particularly true for muted or dusty oranges.
Closest digital match based on color values. Always verify with physical samples.
Valspar
Benjamin Moore
Vista Paint
Hirshfield's
Sherwin-Williams
MPC
PPG
Dunn-Edwards
Timeless pairing with clean white trim and a tonal accent wall

Side Walls
#BAA27A
Accent Wall
A warm shift that adds depth without clashing.
#A8AD85
Trim & Molding
Crisp white trim for a clean, traditional look.
#FFFFFF
Color harmonies based on color theory — each swatch links to the closest matching paint.
Opposite on the color wheel — creates vibrant contrast
Color schemes built around this color — each swatch links to the closest matching paint.
Warm tones with cozy appeal — welcoming and comfortable
Cool hues with soft contrast — serene and restful
Complementary hues with punch — dynamic and striking
Other Behr colors close to Oxford Street.
Cross-brand colors in the orange family — useful when you want a similar look from a different brand.
How to Match Paint Colors Across Brands
The science behind Delta E and CIEDE2000 — find a Behr equivalent of any Sherwin-Williams shade, or a Benjamin Moore alternative when your store is out of stock.
Understanding Paint Color Undertones
Why Oxford Street's neutral undertone matters more than its surface color — and how to read undertones in any paint chip.