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ColorArchive

Reference Library

Famous Color Palettes

Iconic palettes from the most recognized brands, art movements, films, and design systems in history — with hex codes, cultural context, and the stories behind each color choice.

33 iconic palettes5 categoriesClick any hex to copy

33 palettes

BrandsTech

Google

Est. 1998

Google's primary color system uses the four colors of the original logo — red, blue, yellow, and green — to express playfulness, optimism, and accessibility. The palette intentionally breaks color harmony rules, signaling that Google doesn't follow conventions.

Used across Google's product family, logos, and Material Design system as brand anchors.

TechPrimary ColorsPlayfulBrand Identity
BrandsTech

Apple

Est. 1976

Apple's modern palette is defined by restraint — silver, space gray, and near-black — reflecting the brand's pursuit of simplicity and premium craftsmanship. The aluminum-inspired neutrals have become synonymous with premium technology design.

Defines Apple's hardware and software aesthetic since the 2000s redesign under Jony Ive.

TechMinimalPremiumNeutral
BrandsTech

Spotify

Est. 2006

Spotify's electric green on near-black creates one of the most recognizable two-color identities in tech. The Spotify Green (#1DB954) has become an industry landmark — bold enough to own in a crowded space, yet flexible enough to sit next to any album art.

Core brand identity used across the app, marketing, and audio ad placements.

TechBoldHigh ContrastTwo-Color
BrandsTech

Netflix

Est. 1997

Netflix's signature red against deep black creates instant recognition and high shelf-impact. The Netflix Red (#E50914) is calibrated for maximum visibility on dark screens and in physical signage, making it one of the most powerful single-color brand plays in media.

Global streaming brand used across 190+ countries, posters, UI, and advertising.

MediaBoldHigh ContrastRed-Dominant
BrandsTech

Meta (Facebook)

Est. 2004

Facebook's original blue (#1877F2) was chosen partly because Mark Zuckerberg is red-green colorblind — blue was the color he could see most vividly. Now representing Meta, the palette has expanded but the blue remains the brand anchor for its 3 billion user family.

Used across Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Meta corporate identity.

TechSocial MediaBlueTrust
BrandsTech

Airbnb

Est. 2008

Airbnb's Rausch coral was named after the street in San Francisco where the company was founded. The warm coral communicates warmth, belonging, and human connection — deliberately different from the cold blues of tech giants. Paired with dark Babu, it creates an inviting yet trustworthy system.

Used across the global Airbnb platform, Bélo logo, and host/guest communications.

TechWarmCoralHospitality
BrandsTech

Slack

Est. 2009

Slack's aubergine purple creates distance from corporate blue — a deliberate choice to signal that work can feel less formal. The multi-color hashtag icon uses all four brand colors in harmony, expressing openness and collaboration. The rebrand in 2019 refined the hues but preserved the core intent.

Used across the Slack workspace collaboration platform and B2B marketing.

TechPurpleMulti-ColorB2B
BrandsTech

Stripe

Est. 2010

Stripe's gradient-rich identity blends deep blues with purples and aquas, expressing sophisticated technology and trust. The brand uses gradient color boldly — eschewing the flat minimalism of the era to create visual richness that signals technical depth and premium positioning.

Used across Stripe's payment infrastructure, developer tools, and financial services.

TechFintechGradientPurple
BrandsLuxury

Tiffany & Co.

Est. 1845

Tiffany Blue is one of the most protected colors in luxury branding — a custom Pantone shade (1837) trademarked by Tiffany & Co. The robin's egg blue communicates exclusivity, romance, and craftsmanship, and the famous "blue box" has made the color synonymous with jewelry gifting worldwide.

Used exclusively on packaging, branding, and marketing materials for Tiffany & Co.

LuxuryJewelryIconicTeal
BrandsLuxury

Hermès

Est. 1837

Hermès orange is one of luxury's most recognizable single-color identities. Originally an accident — Hermès adopted orange from wartime scarcity of preferred cream and beige packaging materials — the color became so beloved it became the brand's signature. The specific shade communicates French craftsmanship, warmth, and irreverence.

Used across the iconic Hermès orange box, bags, and all Hermès packaging worldwide.

LuxuryFashionOrangeFrench
BrandsLuxury

Chanel

Est. 1910

Coco Chanel popularized the power of black in fashion and branding. The stark black-and-white Chanel identity — used on packaging, the iconic No. 5 bottle, and the classic suit — became the definitive visual expression of Parisian elegance. Nothing says luxury sophistication like the absence of color.

Core brand identity used across Chanel fashion, beauty, and fragrance globally.

LuxuryFashionMinimalBlack & White
BrandsFood

McDonald's

Est. 1940

McDonald's yellow and red is a masterclass in appetite-stimulating color psychology. Red increases heart rate and creates urgency; yellow generates happiness and attracts attention. Together they maximize speed of decision-making — ideal for quick-service restaurants. The palette has remained remarkably consistent for over 70 years.

Used globally across all McDonald's signage, packaging, marketing, and digital presence.

FoodFast FoodAppetiteHigh Energy
BrandsFood

Coca-Cola

Est. 1886

Coca-Cola's red is one of the most recognized colors on earth. The specific red (#F40009) is said to have influenced how Santa Claus is depicted in Western culture — the Coke-inspired red suit replacing earlier green variants. The palette communicates happiness, energy, and refreshment, with Spencerian white script as the perfect contrast.

The definitive consumer brand color — used across 200+ countries in beverages and advertising.

FoodBeverageIconicRed
Art & MovementsDesign Movement

Bauhaus

Est. 1919

The Bauhaus school reduced design to its essential components — including color. Johannes Itten and Josef Albers developed color theory at Bauhaus that still underlies design education today. The school's palette emphasized pure primary and secondary colors used geometrically and purposefully, rejecting decoration for function.

Developed at the Bauhaus school in Weimar, Germany (1919–1933) under masters including Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky.

Art MovementDesign HistoryPrimary ColorsGeometric
Art & MovementsFine Art

De Stijl / Mondrian

Est. 1917

Piet Mondrian's Neoplasticism reduced visual language to horizontal and vertical black lines and the three primary colors, plus black and white. His compositions were about universal harmony through reduction — stripping away the particular to reveal the universal. This palette has influenced everything from fashion (Yves Saint Laurent's 1965 Mondrian dress) to corporate logos.

Developed by Piet Mondrian and Theo van Doesburg as part of the Dutch De Stijl art movement.

Fine ArtPrimary ColorsGeometricDutch
Art & MovementsDesign Movement

Memphis Design

Est. 1981

Memphis Design was a rebellion against 1970s minimalism — loud, colorful, pattern-heavy, and deliberately 'bad taste.' Founded by Ettore Sottsass in Milan in 1981, the movement's palette of pastel pink, cobalt, turquoise, and black-and-white graphic patterns became enormously influential and is seeing a major revival in contemporary digital design.

Founded by Ettore Sottsass and the Memphis Group in Milan, 1981–1988.

Design MovementMaximalistPastelsItalian80s
Art & MovementsDesign Movement

Art Deco

Est. 1925

Art Deco emerged from the 1925 Paris Exposition — a reaction against both Arts & Crafts naturalism and Art Nouveau's organic curves. The palette uses deep, saturated colors — Egyptian blue, crimson, forest green — accented with gold, bronze, and geometric black-and-white patterns. It communicates luxury, modernity, and the glamour of the machine age.

Peaked in the 1920s–30s; visible in architecture (Chrysler Building), fashion, film, and graphic design.

Art MovementLuxuryGoldGeometric1920s
Art & MovementsFine Art

Impressionism

Est. 1874

Impressionism was the first art movement to study the scientific nature of color and light. Monet, Renoir, and Sisley rejected fixed local color in favor of capturing the optical sensation of light — using broken, unmixed brushstrokes of complementary colors to create vibration and luminosity. The resulting palette is soft, light-filled, and atmospherically rich.

Emerging from Paris in the 1870s, with key works by Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, and Sisley.

Fine ArtSoftLightFrenchNature
Art & MovementsFine Art

Pop Art

Est. 1958

Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, and the Pop Art movement elevated consumer culture and mass media imagery into fine art. The palette is defined by flat, unmodulated primaries and secondaries — the colors of cheap print reproduction, comic books, and supermarket packaging — used with maximum saturation and no tonal gradation.

Developed in New York and London in the late 1950s–1960s, with Warhol's Factory as its epicenter.

Fine ArtBoldSaturatedAmerican60s
Film & CinemaDirector

Wes Anderson Films

Est. 1996

Wes Anderson's films (Moonrise Kingdom, The Grand Budapest Hotel, Isle of Dogs) are defined by their fastidiously controlled color palettes — dusty pastels, muted pinks, and warm neutrals arranged with mathematical symmetry. Production designer Adam Stockhausen describes the process as starting with a single color and building a world from it.

Across Wes Anderson's filmography from Bottle Rocket (1996) to Asteroid City (2023).

FilmPastelSymmetricalVintageWhimsical
Film & CinemaCinematography

Blade Runner 2049

Est. 2017

Cinematographer Roger Deakins designed three distinct color worlds for Blade Runner 2049: warm amber and orange for the LA dystopia, cool grays and blues for the sterile indoor spaces, and the blinding white of the San Diego waste zone. The teal-and-orange opposition became one of cinema's most discussed color palettes, influencing design and photography globally.

Directed by Denis Villeneuve, cinematography by Roger Deakins (Academy Award winner).

FilmSci-FiTeal-OrangeCinematicDeakins
Film & CinemaDirector

The Grand Budapest Hotel

Est. 2014

Adam Stockhausen designed The Grand Budapest Hotel's visual world around Mendl's pink — a specific dusty rose that functions as the film's emotional anchor. Every frame uses a strict palette of mauve-pinks, creams, purples, and muted reds — a Central European confection that exists equally in nostalgia and farce.

Directed by Wes Anderson; production design by Adam Stockhausen. Won Academy Award for Production Design.

FilmPastelPinkWhimsicalEuropean
Film & CinemaCinematography

The Matrix

Est. 1999

The Wachowskis used color to distinguish reality from simulation in The Matrix — the real world bathed in cool blues, while the simulated Matrix world used sickly desaturated greens (inspired by the phosphor glow of CRT monitors). The falling green code became one of cinema's most iconic visual signatures.

Directed by the Wachowskis; influenced by cyberpunk aesthetics and Japanese animation.

FilmSci-FiGreenCyberMonochromatic
Film & CinemaCinematography

Mad Max: Fury Road

Est. 2015

George Miller's cinematographer John Seale created one of the most celebrated uses of complementary color opposition in cinema — the Namibian desert burnished to maximum orange, with every shadow and sky pushed to deep teal. The extreme split-complementary contrast maximizes visual energy and heat, matching the film's relentless kinetic pace.

Directed by George Miller; cinematography by John Seale. Won 6 Academy Awards.

FilmActionTeal-OrangeDesertHigh Contrast
Design SystemsColor Theme

Nord

Est. 2016

Nord is an Arctic-inspired color palette created by Sven Greb that became one of the most popular developer color themes. Its four color regions — Polar Night (dark grays), Snow Storm (light neutrals), Frost (Arctic blues), and Aurora (soft accents) — create a harmonious system that works for terminals, code editors, and UI design.

Widely adopted across Vim, VS Code, iTerm, and other developer environments.

Design SystemDeveloperArcticDark ThemeMinimal
Design SystemsColor Theme

Solarized

Est. 2011

Ethan Schoonover designed Solarized to reduce eye strain through precisely calibrated contrast ratios and a warm amber-toned background. He spent months developing the palette using the CIECAM02 color appearance model — the first widely-used color theme built on perceptual color science rather than aesthetics alone.

Created by Ethan Schoonover in 2011; adopted by hundreds of developer tools worldwide.

Design SystemDeveloperWarmPerceptualScientific
Design SystemsColor Theme

Dracula

Est. 2013

Dracula was created by Zeno Rocha as a Halloween project — a dark theme for code editors inspired by Gothic aesthetics. The unexpected pairing of deep purple-gray with neon pink, cyan, and green creates a theme that's simultaneously dramatic and readable, making it one of the most beloved dark themes in developer culture.

Available for 200+ applications; one of the most starred color theme repositories on GitHub.

Design SystemDeveloperDark ThemeNeonGothic
Design SystemsDesign System

IBM Design Language

Est. 2014

IBM's design language (Carbon) uses a sophisticated multi-step color scale anchored in IBM Blue — a refined, institutional blue that conveys trust, precision, and depth. The system was developed to unify IBM's vast product portfolio while maintaining accessibility standards throughout. The palette was deeply influenced by Paul Rand's original IBM visual identity work from the 1950s.

Governs design across all IBM products and services; implemented as the open-source Carbon Design System.

Design SystemEnterpriseBlueAccessibleIBM
Fashion & TrendsColor Trend

Millennial Pink

Est. 2016

Millennial Pink dominated culture from approximately 2016–2019 — appearing in fashion, interiors, tech products, and social media aesthetics. It's not a single color but a family of dusty, desaturated pinks that signaled a certain ironic-but-earnest quality of the Instagram generation. The rose gold hardware era and Glossier's branding both typify the trend.

Peaked around 2016–2019; associated with Instagram aesthetics, Glossier, and millennial consumer culture.

FashionTrendPinkInstagramSoft
Fashion & TrendsColor Trend

Pantone Color of the Year 2024

Est. 2024

Pantone 13-1023 Peach Fuzz was selected as 2024's Color of the Year to communicate nurturing, gentleness, and human connection in an age of digital overload. The soft, warm peach sits between pink and orange, evoking comfort and community. It appeared prominently in fashion, beauty, and interior design across 2024.

Announced by the Pantone Color Institute in December 2023; appeared widely in fashion and interior design in 2024.

FashionPantoneTrendPeachWarm2024
Fashion & TrendsColor Trend

Pantone Color of the Year 2023

Est. 2023

Pantone 18-1750 Viva Magenta was chosen for 2023 as an unconventional red — a cochineal-inspired crimson with no blue or black, rooted in nature. It was described as 'assertive but not aggressive,' a color for an era demanding boldness without aggression. Seen widely in fashion, packaging, and digital design through 2023.

Announced by the Pantone Color Institute in December 2022; seen across fashion and media in 2023.

FashionPantoneTrendRedMagenta2023
Fashion & TrendsColor Trend

Pantone Color of the Year 2022

Est. 2022

Pantone 17-3938 Very Peri — a custom blue-purple invented specifically for 2022 — was notable as the first time Pantone created an entirely new color for the Color of the Year. It represents the blending of the digital and physical worlds, with its periwinkle hue evoking creativity, imagination, and the metaverse era.

Announced December 2021. Controversial pick as a newly invented color rather than an existing Pantone swatch.

FashionPantoneTrendPeriwinkleBlue-Purple2022
Fashion & TrendsTimeless

Classic Navy & Cream

Navy and cream is fashion's most enduring color pairing — found in nautical heritage (stripes, blazers), Ivy League prep wear, and a century of classic tailoring. The combination communicates reliability, understated authority, and quiet taste without the severity of black-and-white. It's the palette of permanence.

Foundational to American sportswear, European tailoring, and nautical fashion traditions.

FashionTimelessNavyHeritageClassic

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