Autumn Harvest
Autumn harvest is built on the deep, saturated warmth of late-season organic materials — colors that have dried, aged, and concentrated over the growing season into their richest and most intense expression. These are not the early autumn colors of fresh orange leaves and bright yellow; they are the late harvest palette of dried grasses, aged wood, preserved fruits, the specific brown-red of turning oak, and the deep olive of spent foliage. Amber-velvet-muted provides the palette's foundational warm amber — a desaturated, muted amber that reads as aged rather than vivid, like amber seen in indirect autumn light through dusty glass. Ember-veil-muted gives the deep rust-copper register — the specific warm brown of dried ember and aged copper, a color that reads as spent and preserved rather than hot and active. Garnet-velvet-soft provides the palette's deepest tone — a soft, muted garnet that reads as concentrated fruit and aged wood, the color of late autumn vineyards and dark harvest produce. Olive-dusk-muted extends to the characteristic muted yellow-green of late-season foliage — dried grass, preserved herb, the specific olive of late-autumn sage after the first frost. Amber-whisper-muted completes the range with a very pale, desaturated amber that reads as dried parchment and aged paper — the palette's lightest and most restrained tone.
Autumn harvest works for seasonal campaigns (Q4 retail, harvest-season food and beverage), premium food and agricultural brands with a terroir and provenance positioning, heritage craft spirits and wine brands, premium home goods and interior brands with a seasonal warmth character, editorial photography campaigns, and autumn fashion editorial. The palette has natural affinity with premium print and tactile materials — an embossed, letterpress, or foil-stamped execution in these tones on uncoated paper stock aligns with the palette's aged, organic quality. Photography direction: natural autumn light (warm, raking low-angle light), aged materials (wood, stone, paper, ceramic), close-up textures of harvest produce and dried organic materials, interior photography with warm tungsten light in aged wood environments.
Deep amber, burnt rust, olive, and garnet — the specific palette of late harvest season: aged oak barrels, the color of dried corn and turning leaves, the particular richness of October afternoons.
Palette
Each swatch links back to its individual archive detail page.
Collections should do more than group swatches. Each one should read like a usable design direction with a clear emotional lane and a real application surface.
This detail route is the missing layer between a generic palette gallery and a convincing design reference. It gives the set a specific point of view.
Ready-made tokens for Autumn Harvest
Palette packs extend these colors into Figma tokens, CSS variables, Tailwind config, and Procreate swatches — structured to drop directly into your project.
From one collection to a full pack
This collection proves the taste and color direction. The related packs add more collections, token exports, and usage guidance so the palette can move from reference to implementation.
| Layer | What you have here | What the related packs add |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | One curated five-color editorial direction. | More collections, broader token coverage, and a fuller working set. |
| Output | Visual palette, copyable CSS preview, and per-color archive pages. | Downloadable CSS, JSON, Tailwind, and pack-specific asset bundles. |
| Use case | Direction finding, inspiration, and public proof. | Real project handoff, implementation, and reusable product assets. |
