14 Forest Green Nursery Ideas
This post is all about Forest Green Nursery Ideas!

Forest green is a bold move for a baby's room, but I love it. Pastels feel a bit tired right now, and deep, moody greens bring a weirdly calm energy that works perfectly for late-night feeds. The tricky part is making sure the space doesn’t look like a dark cave. You have to get the lighting, the undertones, and the textures exactly right. Here is how I do it.
1. Renter-Friendly Peel-and-Stick Wallpaper

Renting means you can't just slap a coat of Benjamin Moore on the drywall. Peel-and-stick wallpaper is your best friend here. Chasing Paper makes incredible moody botanical prints that lean heavy into forest greens. Pair it with a tension-rod curtain wall behind the crib to fake architectural depth without losing your security deposit.
2. Zero-VOC Forest Green Paints You Can Trust

If you are painting, skip the cheap stuff. You absolutely need zero-VOC, non-toxic options for a baby's room. Clare's "Current Mood" is a fantastic rich green, but if you want true forest, go with Benjamin Moore’s "Hunter Green" in their Eco Spec line. It's safe, cures fast, and dries down completely matte.
3. DIY Board-and-Batten Accent Walls

Doing a full room in dark green can sometimes feel overwhelming. A budget-friendly compromise is a half-wall board-and-batten setup. You just need inexpensive pine lattice strips, a brad nailer, and caulk. Paint the lower half forest green and keep the top a crisp, warm white (like Alabaster by Sherwin-Williams). It grounds the room without shrinking it.
4. Brass Cribs and Metallic Hardware

Forest green aggressively demands warm metals. Silver and brushed nickel look incredibly cheap against dark green walls. A vintage-style brass crib from Namesake or Crate & Kids pops brilliantly against a moody green backdrop. Throw in some unlacquered brass wall sconces or heavy brass drawer pulls on the changing table to tie it all together.
5. Getting the Lightbulb Temperature Right

This is the biggest mistake I see. If your lightbulbs are too cool (4000K+), forest green looks like a sterile hospital. If they are too warm (2700K), the green turns into a muddy, gross brown. Aim for exactly 3000K to 3500K. It keeps the green rich and true to color while still feeling cozy enough for 3 AM diaper changes.
6. Bringing in Rattan and Bamboo

Dark walls need visual relief. Warm, natural materials are non-negotiable. An oversized rattan pendant light or a bamboo side table breaks up the heavy color block. I’m a massive fan of the woven rattan changing baskets you see everywhere—they look fantastic sitting on a mid-century walnut dresser against that green paint.
7. Moody Woodland and Botanical Prints

Nursery themes easily stray into tacky territory. Avoid cartoonish decals. Instead, frame vintage-style botanical prints, Audubon bird illustrations, or moody woodland sketches. You can find massive, affordable digital downloads on Etsy and print them via Mpix. Frame them in warm oak for an instant gallery wall that feels intentional.
8. Boucle and Sheepskin Layers

Dark walls absorb light, so you have to inject brightness through texture. A creamy white boucle glider or a faux sheepskin rug draped over the back of a rocking chair does the trick beautifully. The contrast between the rigid, dark walls and the fluffy, tactile fabrics makes the whole setup feel incredibly expensive.
9. Faux Olive Trees for Height

Every room needs something tall in the corner. Since real plants and crawling babies are a terrible combination, get a high-quality faux olive tree. The muted sage leaves on an olive tree play so well against deep forest green walls. Throw the plastic planter in a woven seagrass basket and you are done.
10. The Longevity Strategy

Don't design a room that only works for an infant. Forest green is inherently mature, which is a massive advantage. Skip the babyish furniture. Buy a solid wood dresser from West Elm or CB2 that easily transitions into a teenage room. Keep the green paint, but swap the crib for a twin bed later. Dark green ages flawlessly if you don't over-theme the room.
11. Caramel Leather Gliders

Fabric gliders are fine, but a caramel leather recliner against a forest green wall? Unmatched. The warm orange undertones in the leather are the exact opposite of green on the color wheel, making both colors absolutely pop. Plus, leather wipes clean. Spit-up happens.
12. Painting the Ceiling

Color drenching is everywhere right now, and I fully support it. If you have tall ceilings, painting the ceiling the exact same forest green as the walls is a massive flex. It blurs the corners of the room and makes the ceiling feel endless. Just make sure you have decent natural light from a window, or it will feel too heavy.
13. Vintage Turkish Rug Anchors

Skip the washable, mass-produced baby rugs. Hunt down a vintage Turkish or Persian rug on eBay with hits of terracotta, navy, and muted green. It anchors the deep wall color, adds ridiculous amounts of character, and hides stains like a champion.
14. Beadboard with Shaker Pegs

This is a much easier alternative to board-and-batten. Install beadboard panels halfway up the wall, cap it with a simple piece of trim, and add wooden Shaker pegs every six inches. Paint the whole lower section dark green. It gives you instant, functional storage for cute baby outfits and canvas bags while breaking up the visual weight.
I will always push for a dark green room over a pastel one, mostly because it looks better in the messy reality of everyday life. That caramel leather chair paired with hunter green walls is honestly a combination I’d put in my own living room, let alone a nursery.
FAQ
What colors go best with forest green in a nursery? Warm tones are your best bet. Mustard yellow, terracotta, blush pink, and creamy whites balance the darkness of the green. Avoid stark whites, which make the green look too harsh.
Is dark green too dark for a baby's room? Not if you control the lighting and use plenty of contrast. Stick to 3000K lightbulbs, use large light-colored rugs, and bring in natural light to keep the space from feeling heavy.
Which Benjamin Moore green is best for a nursery? Hunter Green is the classic forest shade, but Regent Green is excellent if you want something that leans almost black. Both are available in zero-VOC formulas like Eco Spec.
How do I make a dark green room feel bigger? Only paint halfway up the wall using beadboard or wainscoting. Painting the bottom half dark and the top half white grounds the room but keeps the visual plane open.
