Rocket City Coatings

Rendered from the blend formula — hover to shift the broadcast · sample board at every measure

Driftwood

Gray and tan argue in most garages — gray floor, tan walls, and neither side wins. Driftwood is the treaty. It's a weathered gray-brown, the color of a fence board after ten Alabama summers, and it bridges cool and warm palettes better than anything else we carry. Builders' favorite for spec homes for exactly that reason: it won't clash with whatever the next owner paints. Practically, it's a strong dirt-hider — close enough to clay to mute it, gray enough to swallow tire dust — and it's the blend we suggest when someone brings us two paint chips that don't agree with each other. The risk is blandness in an all-neutral room. Give it one strong color somewhere nearby and it earns its keep.

Pairs well with: The bridge pick — works between tan walls and gray trim, and under white or wood-tone cabinets alike.

Ships in: Goes in as the middle layer of the Rocket City System, applied wall to wall with no skimping.

Blend formula
ComponentValue
FlakeTorginol vinyl, 1/4" standard cut
Color trio #94897c · #665d52 · #beb5a9
Base coat under it #8a8175 (pigmented polyurea)
CoverageFull broadcast, to rejection
Quote this blend
Is Driftwood gray or tan?
Dead between. In a cool-toned room it reads as warm gray; in a warm room it reads as muted tan. That ambiguity is the point.
Does Driftwood hide both clay and tire dust?
Yes — it's one of the few blends positioned to mute both, since its range covers warm browns and neutral grays at once.

Want Driftwood on your floor?

One day on the tools, and this exact broadcast is what you park on.

CALL (339) 368-5083