They are not really green, but rather a creamy shade of olive. But they are more like green than anything else.
I’d say beige.
Our new house came with interior painted some sort of grey. To me it looks light tan. But when I put the paint chip up against the wall they match perfectly. Something about LCD lighting? A popular YouTuber built a house recently and used the exact same shade. I wonder what they see?
Mrs. FtG is slightly color blind. She thinks the walls are green. So she would likely also say a tinge of green here. (Her father was seriously colorblind. He once bought a red car since he wanted a car the same color as grass.)
Depends on which bulbs you buy. Nowadays light options even go beyond the cool warm and daylight choices, some even tunable.
And just the color of the light doesn’t tell you everything. The color rendition index matters a lot as to how true the colors you see will be.
Sunlight, and incandescent bulbs, have a perfect color rendition index. They have some light at every color, and the color you see is just an overall average. But early LCDs only generated light at a few wavelengths. Which means items that mostly reflect light at different wavelengths look funny, or dull. Newer LCDs can be much better, and some approach sunlight in quality. But it’s worth checking.
Light khaki.
Putty.
Definitely some shade of beige to me. Even if they do have a hint of green to them, (which I don’t see) I don’t think I ever refer to anything so subtly-colored as “green.” I’d reserve that for something that is obviously green. I’d add a descriptor, like maybe the khaki-ish green doors.
ObAnecdote: My dad had a jacket that he thought was green and my mom thought was grey (or vice versa). They bickered (cheerfully) about it for years.
Then one day the dry cleaner up the road had a St. Patrick’s Day special: Green items half price! So they decided to make that the deciding factor.
He presented the jacket, and the owner of the shop said, “Ah, green-grey!” (but they did do it half price).
Also see Berlin-Kay theory, e.g., The surprising pattern behind color names around the world - Vox
I’d say a dark version of cream
I remember that you’re in Pennsylvania. Are those metal, and are they about 60 years old? They remind me of the doors in the house of my in-laws, which are definitely beige/ivory. Strangely enough, I don’t seem to have any pictures of them.
Wood.