How to Use “Muddy Colors” to Create a Sophisticated and Earthy Aesthetic

If you’re thinking about renovating or redesigning your home, it’s time to consider moving away from crisp whites or neutral beiges. A new shade paints the town luxurious. These grounded, desaturated tones have taken over celebrity homes and professional design circles. They’re warm, welcoming and effortlessly chic.
What Are Muddy Colors?
Think of muddy colors as the more grounded cousins of brighter hues, with added gray or brown undertones that dull their brightness and make them feel more natural and lived-in. These include:
- Muted greens like olive, sage and moss
- Desaturated browns such as cinnamon, caramel and chocolate
- Dusty pinks, clay reds, mustard yellows
- Taupes, beiges with depth, warm grays
This trend took off as a response to years of bright whites and saturated millennial pinks. Homeowners and designers alike started gravitating toward these softer, more calming tones. Muted and opaque versions now dominate mood boards and influencer decor posts.
Why the shift? Designers say people increasingly crave
comfort, calm and connection to nature, so they’re mimicking natural hues in their spaces. Earthy brown tones have replaced beige and cream as the new luxurious neutral for 2025.
Why Muddy Colors Are So Popular
The subtlety of muted hues can bring vivid character to a space. Here’s why designers and homeowners alike love them.
- Versatile and timeless: Muddy tones don’t scream for attention — they whisper elegance. You can layer or use them as a neutral base for bolder pieces. They mix well with other colors, bringing cohesion to any room.
- Adds instant warmth: Dakota Johnson’s much-loved midcentury modern abode hailing from the 1940s to the 1960s style era is a Carl Maston classic. Pierce & Ward, the design firm behind Johnson’s Hollywood home, championed “ugly” colors — their term for muddy tones — to dial down the pretty and perfect. The result is a house that feels lived-in, grounded and incredibly stylish.
- Connects you to nature: Muddy colors echo the natural world. Think forest floors, autumn leaves and worn-in wood. In Taylor Swift’s Folklore: The Long Pond Studio Sessions, her home decor leaned into this palette with mustard velvets, rustic wood furniture and muted rugs. It’s cottagecore meets cool girl — and it’s gorgeous.
How to Use Muddy Colors in Your Home
If you’re ready to embrace the beauty of muddy hues, here’s how to use them to create a sophisticated and earthy aesthetic.
1. Start With the Walls
Your wall color sets the mood. Browns with reddish undertones offer depth without making the room feel dark. You can also use softer options like taupe or caramel to bring subtle warmth. Go deeper if your room has a lot of natural light. For lower-light rooms, choose muted shades with a bit more warmth to keep it cozy, not gloomy.
2. Layer Similar Undertones
Designers like Lynn Kloythanomsup advise choosing muddy shades with shared undertones to make decorating effortlessly cohesive. A clay-colored sofa paired with muted pinks, olive greens and cinnamon browns is a designer-approved combo. Take inspiration from Johnson’s living room and layer brown with soft reds and greens for a rich, grounded look.
3. Incorporate Natural Textures
Muddy colors work best with natural materials like wood, linen, clay and leather. Swift’s bedroom in Folklore featured a Persian rug, rustic wardrobe and velvet armchair — all in muted, earthy tones that added warmth and texture.
4. Use Muddy Colors as Neutrals
Not all neutrals have to be beige or gray. Earthy browns, deep olives and even desaturated mustard can function as sophisticated neutrals. They ground a space while giving it more character than a stark white backdrop ever could. Elle Decor even named brown the newest neutral in town.
5. Incorporate Light and Plants
Balancing muddy colors with plenty of natural light and foliage is an excellent way to avoid making your home feel too dim. Olive and moss-green tones paired with leafy plants blur the lines between indoors and out. If you don’t have a green thumb, consider a low-maintenance Chinese money plant that can grow up to 12 inches tall.
Muddy Has Never Looked This Good
While murky colors aren’t flashy or vibrant, they are sophisticated. When used correctly, these hues bring personality, warmth and a timeless style that feels anything but boring. Whether revamping a room or building your entire palette from scratch, grounded tones offer a stylish, earthy, modern and nostalgic aesthetic.







