It’s Time For A New Exterior Door Color (From Coral To Pink)

Years ago, I chose a color for our exterior doors from Benjamin Moore called Bird of Paradise. I originally intended to use it only on our front door.

Front door painted Benjamin Moore Bird of paradise -- bright coral paint color

But then when I built the little portico over the side studio door, I thought it was too cute for a white door, so I painted that door the same color.

Portico above exterior door with black pendant light and coral door

And then when our carport was finished, I decided that I wanted the main doors that I go in and out of every day to also have color. I love color so much that I didn’t want it to be limited to the front and side doors only. I wanted to be greeted by a fun color every time I pull into the carport as well. And since all of those doors had a fun color on them, I naturally wanted that same color on the front door of my workshop.

Back yard workshop storage building painted gray with white trim, coral front door, navy blue shutters, white window boxes, and stained wood steps

So I now have a lot of doors that are painted Bird of Paradise. I really do love this color, and I’ve enjoyed seeing this color on our doors every time I pull into our driveway and see all of these doors. (Well, I can’t see the workshop front door from our driveway, but you know what I mean.)

But now, the front door, the side door, and the back studio doors all need to be repainted. It’s been a while since they’ve gotten any attention, and the paint has faded over the years, especially on the studio side door that gets direct sunlight for so much of the day. And the back doors, while they’re not really faded, are the doors that have gotten the most traffic over the last year as I’ve carried in plywood, lumber, tools, etc., in and out of the door while working on my closet and our bedroom. So they’re pretty banged up now and looking pretty sad.

Exterior doors in need of a fresh coat of paint

So I headed back to Benjamin Moore to get a new quart of Bird of Paradise so that I could give all of these doors a fresh coat of paint while I’m working on outdoor projects, and when I picked out the sample card to hand to them to order the paint, it struck me just how orange this color is. I picked it out years ago when I thought I would be using much more coral in my decorating. But as I’ve talked about in previous posts, as I’ve worked through finding my colors for decorating, I’ve swung from coral to pink. I don’t really have much coral (if any) at all inside our house. I’ve always chosen pink over coral in all of the main areas of the house. Our bedroom would be the exception, but even in there, those colors lean more towards orange than coral.

So while I was there, I looked at a few pinks to see if I want to go that direction with our exterior doors, and I decided that it was time for a color change. But it’s hard to envision what a color will look like on an exterior door from a tiny paint sample card.

I remembered seeing a gorgeous pink front door from one of my favorite Facebook accounts that I follow — Amy Howard At Home. This is a color from Amy Howard At Home called Mom’s Heavenly Garden. So I pulled it up on my phone to see if I could find a similar color.

Pink front door painted Mom's Heavenly Garden from Amy Howard At Home
from Amy Howard at Home

As I was trying to match colors to the photo on my phone (not generally a good idea, but it’s all I had), I realized that that color actually has a lot of purple in it, so I tried to find one that had that same depth of color, but with a little less purple in it. I ended up going with Benjamin Moore Deep Carnation.

Benjamin Moore Deep Carnation -- a medium pink paint color

That color looked so pretty on the sample card, in the paint can, and on their website, but when I brought it home and painted a sample on the back doors, the depth of color seems too muted compared to what I’m used to.

Testing Benjamin Moore Deep Carnation on my back doors -- a medium pink paint color

Maybe it would look different and pack more of a punch once I got a whole door painted, but I hesitate to waste time painting a door (especially since all of my doors on the house have glass, which takes more time) if I’m unsure at this point whether or not this is the right color.

As soon as I painted that sample on the back door, I walked into my studio where I saw the vanity from the hallway bathroom sitting there. Yes, it’s in my studio because I don’t have anywhere else to put it right now. 😀 I might try listing it on Facebook Marketplace, but I just haven’t had a chance to do that yet. But anyway, as soon as I saw the color on that vanity, I thought, “Oh, maybe that’s what I want!” This color is Glamorous from Behr, and I think a pink like this would be closer to the depth of color that I’m used to seeing on our doors with the Bird of Paradise.

Bathroom vanity painted Behr Glamorous -- a deep pink paint color

So after seeing that, I’m leaning towards taking my paint back to the Benjamin Moore store and seeing if they can add more color to it to make it closer to their Rosy Blush color. Since my paint has already been tinted a specific color, I know I might not end up with this exact color, but I think I’ll be happier with something closer to this.

Benjamin Moore Rosy Blush -- a deep pink paint color

Anyway, all of that to say that the era of coral doors on our house is over. Just like I’ve done on the interior of our house, I’m moving towards pink instead of coral. I think it’ll be a fresh, new update, and I can’t wait to get at least one door finished. I’m not thrilled about painting all of the exterior doors (including my workshop), but the doors on the house need to be painted anyway. The only door that doesn’t actually need paint right now is the workshop door, but if I’m already painting four doors, what’s one more? I’m excited to see this change.

I’ll head to Benjamin Moore this afternoon and grab a sample of the Rosy Blush so that I can see the two colors side by side. The Deep Carnation is closer to the Amy Howard At Home color that caught my eye, but I think I want something with a little more punch to it. Either way, I’m excited to go from coral to pink. After all, as someone might say about me, “Her culluhs are pink an’ pink.” (Name that movie. 😀 )

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19 Comments

  1. Love the referrence to Steel Mag’s ! LOL
    Also love the deeper / more saturated color choice, it really suits you! Have a stellar day!

    1. Just curious…. I’m wondering if painting over “Bird of Paradise” as opposed to (😬) a swipe or two in just a small area of white as a base (I know,it makes it a two step job…) might have given a truer “color showing” for “Decision making” with regard to the both colors…you are considering… Pls don’t Kill the messenger…😉

  2. lovely. I want to change my door from green to pink. My house is stained brown and the pink climbing roses look really good against the brown exterior.

  3. How about making a deal with yourself to first hang the shutter that people keep mentioning. I’ll bet the neighbors are thinking it is time.

    Love,

    “Mom”

    1. I laughed out loud reading your comment! We each have our own priorities and way to doing things and no doubt Kristi will hang that shutter one day. When I saw the Deep Carnation sample I thought that’s a Kristi color. I didn’t think it lacked depth of color until I saw the pink vanity color and thought, OH, now I see what Kristi means! The Rosy Blush definitely has the WOW factor. I like pink with the navy shutters and gray siding.

  4. I love your coral doors! But I have learned through the years that change is something you do not hesitate to do when necessary and the doors do need to be repainted. I will miss the coral but the pink will be pretty and is definately more you.

  5. When I moved ten years ago I looked at a house with gray siding and if I had been able to purchase it I would have painted the front door a nice pink color like you have picked out.
    Unfortunately the home was in foreclosure and I wasn’t willing to wait another 90 days for the legalities to
    be worked out before I could actually put in a contract. The house I ended up with has a red brick front so a bright pink door wasn’t in the cards but I did paint the door yellow and then last year I painted it an aqua color. However this year my shed which is a faded out yellow needs painting . Maybe it needs a new bright color…..perhaps that pretty pink for the door,shutters and trim. Looking forward to seeing how yours turn out.

  6. I had something similar to the rosy blush on my door for about 15 years. I never got tired of it. Mine was a little deeper reddish/pink and I really hated to paint it but we changed siding colors and it was just time. I think you‘ll love it once you find your perfect shade.

  7. For any of your readers who envy your ability to see colors so distinctly, both Sherwin Williams and Benjamin Moore have apps with features you can use to match something from a photo to one of their colors! I used it a lot when we were looking at repainting a few years ago, especially when finding a new color for our front door, more universally appealing for rental purposes.

  8. I just watched that movie last week!
    Steel Magnolias has some of the best on liners and comebacks ever!
    I don’t think you post on Thursdays so this was a pleasant surprise.

  9. I remember laughing so hard in that movie ‘Steel Magnolias’. I call it my summer movie; they are the chick flicks I used to watch each summer. I loved the days of CD’s! I think you are very brave to put that color on your door. I would love to paint my door a bright deep jewel tone blue, but alas, I live in an HOA community and that would give me a fine.