Colour is not a “nice-to-have” on a facial bed. In real treatment rooms it influences how clean a space feels, how premium the service appears on camera, and how often upholstery needs visible touch-ups between appointments. At YINGXIN, facial beds are commonly upholstered in oil-resistant, waterproof PU leather with multiple standard colour choices, plus OEM colour matching when a project needs a strict brand palette.
For most clinics and salons, the highest-demand colours sit in a neutral spectrum because neutrals visually “disappear” into the environment and pair well with different wall finishes, lighting temperatures, and equipment colours. In YINGXIN’s facial-bed range, standard selection is typically described as 10+ upholstery colour options, with some models listing 12 options, depending on the series.
In production, these neutral families are usually built around:
White family: clean, clinical, high-brightness look that photographs well.
Black family: premium, modern, and forgiving for small marks.
Grey family: calm, professional, and balanced under mixed lighting.
Beige and sand family: warm, spa-style tone that feels less “medical”. These preferences align with broader spa design guidance where beige, white, and grey are frequently used as stable, calming backdrops.
Beyond the standard palette, YINGXIN supports OEM upholstery customization, including bespoke colour matching for projects that must align with reception desks, cabinetry laminates, or chain-store branding. Some product FAQs specify the ability to request custom upholstery colours beyond the listed options, with a stated MOQ for bespoke matching on certain models.
This route is especially useful when:
A multi-branch rollout requires the same colour batch across shipments
A premium studio needs a signature colour for social content consistency
A renovation must match existing furniture rather than replacing everything
Choosing a colour is also choosing what becomes “visible” in daily use: tinting from cosmetics, dye transfer from clothing, and ageing from light exposure. For example, YINGXIN specifically notes that white PU leather can yellow or age faster under strong sunlight, so placement and shading matter more for light colours than for dark ones.
In practical terms:
White shows makeup residue and requires more frequent wipe-down discipline.
Black can hide stains but may reveal dust and lint under bright lighting.
Mid-grey is often the most forgiving balance for real-world upkeep.
Warm beige hides minor marks well, but dye transfer can be more noticeable if the tone is very light.
Treatment environments often clean non-porous surfaces between clients using disinfectants appropriate to the risk level and the product label directions. OSHA emphasizes selecting an appropriate disinfectant for contamination scenarios and that decontamination requirements apply to contaminated items and surfaces.
For soft-surface protocols, manufacturers of healthcare-grade faux leathers commonly validate cleaning with alcohol- and bleach-based solutions, and the CDC notes strong effectiveness at 70% alcohol concentration for disinfection in many contexts.
This matters for colour because aggressive cleaners can accelerate:
gloss change on darker colours
slight tone shifts on whites and warm neutrals
visible “wipe marks” under strong directional lighting
A good purchasing workflow is to confirm the care guidance for the exact upholstery grade and test cleaning on an inconspicuous area before full deployment.
| Room Goal | Recommended Colour Family | Visual Effect | Operational Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clean, clinical impression | White, cool grey | Bright, crisp | Avoid direct sunlight to reduce yellowing risk |
| Premium, modern styling | Black, charcoal | High-end, sleek | Lint and dust show more under spotlights |
| Relaxing spa atmosphere | Warm grey, beige, sand | Soft, calm | Pairs well with wood and warm lighting |
| High-traffic turnover | Mid-grey | “Always tidy” look | Best balance of stain visibility vs. touch-up time |
For export-facing projects, colour is not only aesthetic; pigments and additives can affect compliance documentation. REACH-related guidance highlights that substances of very high concern are tightly regulated in articles, and SVHC thresholds such as 0.1% by weight are commonly referenced in compliance discussions for materials used in products.
When selecting custom colours, it is good practice to align on compliance targets early so the upholstery and pigment system match destination-market requirements.
YINGXIN facial beds typically offer 10+ standard upholstery colours, with some series listing 12 options, and support OEM bespoke colour matching for projects that need precise palette control.
For the smoothest decision, use a three-step process: confirm the room style goal, shortlist 2–3 neutral families, then validate cleaning and lighting behavior using physical swatches. Share the target colour reference and project quantity to request the recommended upholstery options, matching guidance, and production plan for bulk order execution.