Barrow & Fall

Coppice Blue

A rich, deep teal

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Best Dupes for Coppice Blue

Coppice Blue is a cool artisan blue with a touch of slate, bold enough for feature walls but calm enough for cabinetry. People seek alternates because it needs meticulous prep to avoid patchiness, and designer tins add up fast on full-height panelling. Strong dupes hold the teal whisper, keep opacity high for joinery, and resist flashing purple under LED strips.

Dupes for Coppice Blue

Brand Colour Rating Shop
Benjamin Moore Stained Glass 1 ⭐
Benjamin Moore Polar Jade 1 ⭐
Benjamin Moore Fair Isle Blue 1 ⭐
Dulux Trade Teal Lux 1 ⭐
PPG / Johnstone's Azalea Leaf / Star Blanket 1 ⭐
PPG / Johnstone's Juniper Berry / Dusk Puddle 1 ⭐
Behr Walk Me Home 3 ⭐
Behr Sequoia Lake 1 ⭐
Behr Underwater 1 ⭐
Behr Juniper Berries 1 ⭐
Behr Sophisticated Teal 1 ⭐

Getting Coppice Blue Right

Coppice Blue mixes cobalt and slate, so it feels sharper than Dix Blue but lighter than De Nimes. It is ideal for cabinetry, panelling, or a single chimney breast when you want colour that still reads sophisticated.

Balance the cool tone with warm brass, terracotta pots, or pale oaks; otherwise the blue can tip coastal. In open-plan rooms, let neighbouring walls fall back to Stone Blue or a calm neutral so the feature moment remains deliberate.

Testing Coppice Blue dupes

Paint primed boards vertically and move them from daylight to lamp light-the pigment carries a slight teal shift you want to catch early. Sit the samples beside floor tiles and countertops; cool quartz can make the colour feel icy, while oak softens it instantly.

If you are coating kitchen units, ask for the dupe in the actual sheen so you can confirm brush marks disappear and the blue does not flash purple at higher gloss levels.

Where it excels

Coppice Blue shines on larders, powder-room walls, or built-in bookcases paired with unlacquered brass hardware. It also makes a striking exterior door when the rest of the elevation is calmed with Wevet or limewashed brick.

Keep lighting soft and layered and this blue will read considered rather than playful, regardless of the brand you buy.

Coppice Blue vs Similar Shades

Compared Colour Relationship When to choose it instead Link
Dix Blue Softer + greener Use when you want a gentler, cottage take on teal walls. View colour
Stone Blue Greyer Choose this for formal dining rooms needing a smarter blue. View colour
De Nimes Inky Great for kitchens or mudrooms where you want more depth. View colour
Hague Blue Darker Pick when you need almost-navy drama on doors or bookcases. View colour

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