Three brand colour palettes for interior designers who are ready for a visual identity that matches their work
Your portfolio is beautiful. Your projects are considered, layered, carefully art directed. And then someone lands on your website and the branding feels like it was built in an afternoon.
It happens more often than it should. Interior designers are brilliant at creating atmosphere for their clients — and often the last to apply that same intention to their own brand.
Colour is where it starts. Not a logo, not a font — the palette. It sets the emotional tone before anyone reads a word. And when it's right, everything else follows more easily.
Here are three palettes we've been exploring at Studio Heavenly, each one built with an interior design brand in mind.
Quiet Earth

Oatmeal · Crème · Ivory · Moondrop
#A09889 · #DBD9D0 · #EBEAE4 · #2E2D2D
Warm greige tones that feel like natural materials — raw linen, aged oak, matte plaster. This palette suits a brand that wants to feel grounded and premium without leaning into trends. Moondrop gives you the contrast you need for typography and detail without the coldness of a true black.
If your clients tend to use words like "organic," "timeless," or "tactile" to describe what they want — this is your palette.
Salt & Sky

Coconut · Sky · Abbey Stone · Lacquer
#F4F0EA · #A6B2BA · #B9B8AE · #DBD9D4
Soft, coastal, and quietly sophisticated. Sky reads almost grey in certain lights, which is exactly what makes it work so well across brand touchpoints — it doesn't shout, it settles. This palette holds its own on a website, a business card, a printed proposal, or a packaging wrap.
For the interior designer whose work is calm and considered and whose brand should say the same thing.
Morning Fog

Cloud · Mist · Dune · Birch
#EBEBEB · #C1C0C0 · #D2D0C8 · #B1A99D
Silvery neutrals that shift with the light — luminous in the morning, more grounded by the afternoon. This palette has a quiet depth that rewards attention. It layers well, never feels flat, and works particularly beautifully in editorial layouts and minimal website designs.
For the designer who wants their brand to feel like their spaces: refined, understated, and completely intentional.
Getting your brand colour story right isn't just about picking tones you love. It's about choosing colours that speak to the clients you actually want to attract — before they've even read your about page.
If you're an interior designer thinking about what your visual identity is (or isn't) doing for you, that's a conversation worth having.
Palettes by Studio Heavenly — brand strategy and visual identity for creative studios and design businesses. Become A Client