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The color of the year 2026 has just been announced by Pantone, and honestly, it’s more interesting than it seems at first glance. It’s called Cloud Dancer, basically a fluffy off-white with vanilla touches that looks more like the inside of a marshmallow than a traditional color trend. But here’s the interesting part: not even all experts agree. While Pantone is betting on this minimalist white, trend analysts at WGSN were already predicting teal as their star color, and other designers argue that earthy tones will continue to be popular.
What’s clear is that there’s a collective search for serenity. Pantone has a team of color anthropologists analyzing culture, fashion, art, and cities like Tokio and Nueva York, and all their data point to the same thing: we’re saturated with noise and hyperconnectivity, and we want to escape to calm. White acts as that visual refuge we need.
So, what colors really work to transform a space? Cloud Dancer is versatile, pairs with almost everything, and serves as a clean base to play with other tones. Verde azulado continues to gain ground because it represents a connection to nature, the point where land and ocean converge. Earthy reds, berenjenas, deep and comforting purples remain sophisticated options that offer an alternative to conventional marrones.
What many overlook are complex neutrals. Ocre gris is a perfect example of how sober tones ensure that artworks and furniture stand out without competing. And speaking of ocre, this color has a versatility that people underestimate. Ocre gris combines earthy warmth with enough neutrality to work in almost any modern interior. Designers recommend using it in palettes of the same family—layers of tones sharing the same hue: a ocre gris on the walls, a lighter shade on the ceiling, darker on the carpintería.
Pale mineral blues are also gaining prominence, those tones that feel deeply connected to nature. And salvia, jade verde—colors that come from centuries of symbolism, from spring renewal to interiores georgianos.
What’s fascinating is that paint brands understand that names matter. Farrow & Ball gives us Dead Salmon, Elephant’s Breath, Arsenic. Benjamin Moore has Nacho Cheese. Dunn-Edwards offers Dangerous Robot. These aren’t literal descriptions but atmospheres they create, and that’s what really sells. Colors are memorable because they evoke feelings, not just shades.
The truth is, color is never just decoration. It’s mood, memory, that touch of lightness that transforms how we feel at home. Whether you choose a full Cloud Dancer, enjoy the richness of granate, or explore the possibilities of ocre in its more sophisticated variants, the important thing is to understand that we’re in a moment where serenity is the real trend. Everything else is just paint.