Joanna Gaines and Victoria Beckham love this gorgeous forest green color – it's a favorite with designers, decorators, and color forecasters for 2025

Soothing, bold and rich, our love affair with this sumptuous shade is far from over

Dark green room triptych
(Image credit: Courtesy of Magnolia Network / Victoria Beckham/Megan Slack / Future/Jon Day Photography)

Calming, creative and with intrinsic links to nature, dramatic forest green is a versatile, mood-enhancing color that can work in many schemes.

The majesty of ancient forests has long inspired interior design and color trends. Whether the grandeur of an oak tree or enchanting shape of an acanthus leaf, rich, velvety greens offer homes a nurturing connection to nature.

Forests are inherently calming spaces. The Japanese practice of forest bathing is an increasingly popular mindful activity that involves simply being in a forest and noticing the elements in aid of relaxation. The same feeling of calm can be replicated in the home by decorating with green. Dark green, in particular.

It's not just designers who share our love for this popular color. HGTV star Joanna Gaines and esteemed fashion designer Victoria Beckham have recently used green in their latest projects. Joanna in her impressive Lake House renovation and Victoria in her London showroom are outstanding examples of decorating with dark green paint. It is a mood-boosting color that many color forecasters would argue is the best color in the world.

A green bathroom with checkered backsplash and a dark wooden door

(Image credit: Courtesy of Magnolia Network)

‘Green reassures us on a very primitive level. We know we can find food and water, which means green equals life. Using dark greens in our home, brings in these feelings of reassurance and rest,’ says Karen Haller, color and design psychology specialist and author of The Little Book of Color, available at Amazon.

Several studies, including those by Won Sop Shin and Grahn and Stigsdotter, have proven that even just a few moments in a forest – or, simply just looking at the color green – can make us feel less stressed. It’s human nature: ‘Taking things back to our primitive roots, green forest equals food, which equals survival,’ says Karen Haller. It’s no wonder that we’re so drawn to this particular shade. Our instincts tell us that forest green is good.

Victoria Beckham's Dover St store

Victoria Beckham's Dover St store

(Image credit: Megan Slack)

And this is supported scientifically, too. ‘Green falls in the middle of the visible color spectrum, meaning our eyes require little to no adjustment to be able to see it,’ says Karen. When faced with green, our eyes don’t have to work hard, so our response is calm. When incorporating forest green into our decorating scheme, then, we should use it in rooms where we want to relax and unwind.

‘Forest green works really well in bedrooms because its darkness absorbs light to blur hard edges,’ says Rob Abrahams, co-founder and CEO at COAT Paints. But I also like to use it in other spaces where I like to relax, such as the bathroom, dressing room and the snug room. It quiets the mind, and brings just the right amount of calm without being too foreboding.

Shop the look

TOPICS
Jennifer Ebert
Editor

Jennifer is the Digital Editor at Homes & Gardens. Having worked in the interiors industry for several years in both the US and UK, spanning many publications, she now hones her digital prowess on the 'best interiors website' in the world. Multi-skilled, Jennifer has worked in PR and marketing and occasionally dabbles in the social media, commercial, and the e-commerce space. Over the years, she has written about every area of the home, from compiling houses designed by some of the best interior designers in the world to sourcing celebrity homes, reviewing appliances, and even writing a few news stories or two.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.