🎨 Old Money Wedding Colour Guide
- Yes I Will Marry You

- Feb 19
- 2 min read
A curated palette to inspire your timeless, elegant decor
This blog may contain Amazon affiliate links, which means I may earn a small commission if you purchase through my links — at no extra cost to you.
Your support helps me continue creating wedding tips, decor inspiration, and budget finds. Thank you for supporting my content!
To see the product page, click on the photo or coloured link
🕊 Classic & Understated Bases
Ivory & Champagne
Soft, warm neutrals form the foundation of an old money wedding. These tones look luxe without feeling trendy and photograph beautifully in candlelight. Use them for linens, bridesmaid dresses, stationery, and floral bases.
Cream & Taupe
A step beyond basic white, these creamy neutrals add depth while remaining soft and refined — ideal for venue accents and textured fabrics.
🌿 Sophisticated Colour Pairings
A quintessential old money palette: warm neutrals with metallic shimmer. Pair champagne linens with ivory florals and subtle gold accents like flatware, candlesticks, or fine china trim.
Deep navy adds drama and grounding, while cream keeps the palette elegant and balanced. Great for bridesmaid gowns, tux colors, table linens, or stationery detail borders.
This garden-estate-inspired combo feels quietly refined — perfect for outdoor or heritage venues. Bring in sage through greenery, bridesmaids, or linen accents.
For a rich, heritage look (especially stunning in autumn or winter), pair burgundy tones with deep greens and soft cream to keep things elegant, not overwhelming.
💐 Bonus Accent Colours
These work beautifully as secondary tones — add them in florals, ribbons, signage or little details like cocktail napkins or chair sashes:
Soft Blush / Dusty Rose — romantic and subtle, ideal for feminine accents.
Muted Sage / Olive Green — natural, calming, and perfect with neutral bases.
Gold or Antique Silver — metallic accents convey quiet luxury when used sparingly.
Black & White touches — classic contrast that never ages, great for formal details like signage or stationery.
🪩 Styling Tips for Your Palette
Keep it to 2–3 main colours: Too many hues can look chaotic — old money elegance is curated and intentional.
Vary textures: Use velvet, silk, linen, and metallic finishes in your chosen colours to add richness without extra colour.
Nature + neutrals: Fresh greenery, neutral blooms (peonies, roses, ranunculus), and soft foliage reinforce sophistication without loud colour pops.
Metallic details: Integrate gold, antique silver, or brass through decor pieces like candle holders, flatware, frames, and chargers — not overpowering, just enough to elevate.
📌 Quick Palette Examples
Palette Name | Primary Colors | Why It Works |
Quiet Estate | Ivory + Champagne + Gold | Clean, soft, refined timeless elegance |
Regal Classic | Navy + Cream | Deep contrast with classic sophistication |
Garden Muse | Sage Green + Cream + Taupe | Natural, elegant, effortlessly romantic |
Heritage Luxe | Burgundy + Forest Green + Cream | Rich, warm, and perfect for classic venues |
💡 Pro Tip: Build a small swatch board or physical samples of fabrics/flowers before finalising your colours — lighting and texture make a huge difference in person!



Comments