Limestone
In the Liquid Stone range, Limestone reads as the rural English stone tone, built on the kind of warmth that makes evenings feel right and pale-buff pigment. Sits comfortably next to terracotta floors, oak joinery and unbleached cotton. Most Limestone installs end up on hallways and entry sequences or soffits, gutters and trim. Pale and considered: the kind of shade that anchors a whole scheme. Borrows its character from Cotswold vernacular interiors and re-reads them in a modern context.
Best used in hallway, exterior
The rural English stone tone reads its best where the light is even and natural. Below are the rooms we've installed this shade in most often.
- boot-rooms and back halls
- rendered façades
- open-plan kitchens
Shades that sit beside Limestone
Picked by family, warmth and tonal proximity within the same range.
How Limestone is applied
Limestone uses the standard Liquid Stone build. The technical specification is the same across colour — only the pigment changes.
Questions clients ask about this shade
Does Limestone hold up in north-facing rooms?+
Yes — Limestone carries enough warm pigment that it doesn't go flat or grey in cool daylight. The pale-buff undertone is what stops it bleaching out.
Can Limestone be used outside as well as inside?+
Yes — Liquid Stone in Limestone is rated for interior and exterior use. For exterior elevations we add a weather-protective topcoat rated for UK rainfall.
What does Limestone pair with from your range?+
We most often pair Limestone with the three closest shades in its family — see the pairings panel below. Beyond that, sits comfortably next to terracotta floors, oak joinery and unbleached cotton.
See how Limestone behaves in your own light before you commit.
