Northern Lights
The aurora borealis creates vivid, saturated color in darkness — and it does so in a very specific hue range: electric aqua-green (the dominant oxygen emission line), occasional violet-purple (nitrogen), and the deep indigo of the polar night sky. This palette reconstructs those relationships: lagoon-bloom-vivid provides the primary aurora aqua at near-maximum saturation — the color of the aurora at its most intense, reading as electric against deep night; teal-silk-vivid contributes the adjacent aurora green, slightly deeper in lightness, representing the broader curtain of aurora where the oxygen emission fades toward the horizon; violet-shadow-soft carries the deep aurora purple that appears at higher latitudes and in the most active displays — dark and saturated, bridging the gap between the aqua and the night; cobalt-ink-muted provides the near-black of the polar night sky at its deepest, the ground against which the aurora is visible; cerulean-veil-muted supplies the icy pale near-white that appears as the faintest aurora glow fades into sky, and as the cold white light of polar moonlight on snow. The palette is simultaneously natural and otherworldly.
This palette requires a dark background to function correctly. On white, the vivid aqua loses its electric quality and the near-black cobalt becomes a generic dark blue. The intended use: cobalt-ink-muted as the primary background — the darkest entry, the sky itself; lagoon-bloom-vivid as the hero aurora accent for primary interactive elements and brand marks; teal-silk-vivid for secondary content and glows; violet-shadow-soft for atmospheric gradients and layered depth; cerulean-veil-muted for body text and high-contrast light elements against the dark background. Gradient technique: blend cobalt-ink-muted to violet-shadow-soft for background variation that mimics how aurora colors transition across the sky. Photography direction: long-exposure polar night photography, Nordic architecture at night, abstract ice and crystal macro photography with backlighting. The palette positions brands as visionary, technically sophisticated, or premium in an understated way.
Electric lagoon aqua, aurora teal, deep violet, midnight cobalt, and ice cerulean — the palette of the aurora borealis for night-sky, Nordic, and atmospheric brand work.
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 Northern Lights
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. |
