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Apricot Core Faint
Color detail

Apricot Core Faint

Orange · Hue 40
Hex
#877E6E
RGB
rgb(135, 126, 110)
HSL
hsl(40, 10%, 48%)
CMYK
cmyk(0%, 7%, 19%, 47%)
Metrics
S 10% · L 48%
Contrast (WCAG)
on white
4:1AA Large
on black
5.2:1AA
Save to journalSign in to saveStart palette from thisRecent trail

About this color

Apricot Core Faint (#877E6E) belongs to the orange family — hue 40°, 10% saturation, 48% lightness. Copy the hex, RGB, or HSL value above, or paste the CSS custom property below into your stylesheet to reference this color directly.

CSS
:root {
  --colorarchive-apricot-core-faint: #877E6E;
  --colorarchive-apricot-core-faint-hsl: hsl(40, 10%, 48%);
  --colorarchive-apricot-core-faint-rgb: rgb(135, 126, 110);
}

AI Color Names

Let AI suggest alternative poetic names for this color in English and Chinese.

Design Context

CreativeAdventurousConfident
Common in

Technology · Sports · Travel

Pairs well with

Deep blue for trust + energy balance, dark gray for modern tech aesthetics

Design tip

Use for creative tool brands and action-oriented interfaces. Orange buttons consistently outperform other colors in A/B tests for engagement.

Cultural context ▶

Orange represents creativity and adventure. In the Netherlands, it's the national color. In Hinduism, it symbolizes purity.

Color Origins

Orange family

Citrus, fire, and the only color named after a fruit.

Heritage

Orange is unusual: in English the color was named after the fruit, not the other way around — before the fruit reached Europe in the 16th century, this hue was simply 'yellow-red'. Earlier pigments included realgar (toxic), saffron (priceless), and orpiment. Cadmium orange, introduced in the 19th century, gave painters from the Impressionists onward a stable, brilliant orange that didn't fade or poison.

Across cultures

In Hindu and Buddhist tradition saffron orange marks renunciation — the robe of monks across Theravada and Tibetan lineages. The Dutch House of Orange-Nassau gave the Netherlands a national identity color, still worn at football matches and on King's Day. In Ireland, orange is the Protestant counterpart to green's Catholic association — the country's flag literally encodes the divide. Halloween's orange-and-black is a 20th-century American invention that has since gone global.

In the wild

Hermès orange is a brand asset traceable to a 1942 wartime cardboard shortage. Penguin Books used orange-and-white spines as a class signal — fiction was always orange. Nickelodeon, Fanta, and easyJet all chose orange for the same reason: it reads playful and consumer-friendly while staying outside the more crowded red and yellow lanes. NASA flight suits use International Orange specifically because nothing in nature matches it, making astronauts maximally visible against any background.

How it reads

Orange is warm without the urgency of red. It signals appetite (used heavily in fast food), creativity, and approachability. At low saturation it becomes terracotta, rust, or apricot — earthy palettes for hospitality and craft. At high saturation it reads as a sport, energy drink, or warning hazard. Orange and teal is the most common modern film-grade pairing; the contrast between warm skin tones and cool shadows is engineered for it.

This particular tone

A grounded mid-tone — sober, considered, well-suited to body text accents, editorial layouts, or any context where restraint reads as quality.

Lightness band: At mid-lightness the hue carries its full character. This is the band where most identity colors live: bright enough to be distinctive at small sizes, deep enough to sit cleanly on a white canvas.

Saturation band: The low saturation pulls this color toward earthen, vintage, or editorial palettes. It reads as confident and grown-up rather than playful, and it tolerates being used in large blocks without becoming visually noisy.

Brands using a similar color

Within the public brand-guidelines reference catalog, these are the closest matches to #877E6E.

  • Notionneutral
    Notion Gray · #787774
    →
  • Microsoftneutral
    Slate Gray · #737373
    →
  • GitHubaccent
    Attention Yellow · #9A6700
    →

Cultures using a similar color

From the cultural-palette catalog, these regions feature a color close to #877E6E.

  • AustraliaBush Khaki
    #8E895C · Outback grassland in dry season
    →
  • France (Paris)Seine Steel
    #7E8A93 · River reflectivity in winter
    →
  • England (London)Plane Tree Green
    #5C7A5A · Platanus × hispanica, London street tree
    →

Tonal strip

All lightness levels at this hue and saturation. Click any to navigate.

Palette moves

Instead of stopping at one swatch, use nearby, opposite, and tonal neighbors to branch into a broader palette.

Lighter companion
Apricot Radiant Faint
#958E7E · hsl(40, 10%, 54%)
Darker companion
Apricot Velvet Faint
#766F60 · hsl(40, 10%, 42%)
Complementary counterpoint
Cobalt Core Faint
#6E7687 · hsl(220, 10%, 48%)
Analogous lead
Citrine Core Faint
#87876E · hsl(60, 10%, 48%)
Analogous echo
Vermillion Core Faint
#87746E · hsl(15, 10%, 48%)
Triadic +120°
Teal Core Faint
#6E877E · hsl(160, 10%, 48%)
Triadic +240°
Mulberry Core Faint
#7E6E87 · hsl(280, 10%, 48%)
Split-comp +150°
Cerulean Core Faint
#6E8387 · hsl(190, 10%, 48%)
Split-comp +210°
Violet Core Faint
#726E87 · hsl(250, 10%, 48%)
Export preview
Base: Apricot Core Faint #877E6E
Lighter companion: Apricot Radiant Faint #958E7E
Darker companion: Apricot Velvet Faint #766F60
Complementary counterpoint: Cobalt Core Faint #6E7687
Analogous lead: Citrine Core Faint #87876E
Analogous echo: Vermillion Core Faint #87746E
Triadic +120°: Teal Core Faint #6E877E
Triadic +240°: Mulberry Core Faint #7E6E87
Split-comp +150°: Cerulean Core Faint #6E8387
Split-comp +210°: Violet Core Faint #726E87

Compare

See how Apricot Core Faint compares side by side with related colors.

vsApricot Radiant FaintvsApricot Velvet FaintvsCobalt Core FaintvsCitrine Core FaintvsVermillion Core FaintvsTeal Core Faint

Nearest neighbors

The closest archive matches by hue, saturation, and lightness.

Search by hex
Nearby match
Taupe Gray Core
#817C74 · hsl(40, 5%, 48%)
Nearby match
Apricot Core Muted
#908264 · hsl(40, 18%, 48%)
Nearby match
Apricot Velvet Faint
#766F60 · hsl(40, 10%, 42%)
Nearby match
Apricot Radiant Faint
#958E7E · hsl(40, 10%, 54%)
Nearby match
Saffron Core Faint
#87816E · hsl(45, 10%, 48%)
Nearby match
Taupe Gray Velvet
#706D66 · hsl(40, 5%, 42%)

Accessible pairings

Archive colors that meet WCAG contrast standards when paired with this color. Use as text-on-background or background-on-text.

Contrast checker
AA4.5:1
Indigo Ink Vivid
#09123E
AA4.5:1
Indigo Ink Bright
#061042
AA4.5:1
Indigo Ink Pure
#030E45
AA4.6:1
Iris Ink Clear
#101037
AA4.7:1
Iris Ink Vivid
#09093E
AA4.7:1
Iris Ink Bright
#060642

Color Vision Simulation

How this color appears with different color vision deficiencies.

Full simulator
Deuteranopia
#848473
Protanopia
#838372
Tritanopia
#877576
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Vermillion Ink Faint#272220 · hsl(15, 10%, 14%)Vermillion Nocturne Faint#38302E · hsl(15, 10%, 20%)Vermillion Shadow Faint#4F4440 · hsl(15, 10%, 28%)Vermillion Dusk Faint#5F524E · hsl(15, 10%, 34%)Vermillion Velvet Faint#766660 · hsl(15, 10%, 42%)Vermillion Core Faint#87746E · hsl(15, 10%, 48%)Vermillion Radiant Faint#95847E · hsl(15, 10%, 54%)Vermillion Tone Faint#A3948F · hsl(15, 10%, 60%)