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Emerald Tone Clear
Color detail

Emerald Tone Clear

Green · Hue 120
Hex
#62D062
RGB
rgb(98, 208, 98)
HSL
hsl(120, 54%, 60%)
CMYK
cmyk(53%, 0%, 53%, 18%)
Metrics
S 54% · L 60%
Contrast (WCAG)
on white
2:1Fail
on black
10.7:1AA
Save to journalSign in to saveStart palette from thisRecent trail

About this color

Emerald Tone Clear (#62D062) belongs to the green family — hue 120°, 54% saturation, 60% 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-emerald-tone-clear: #62D062;
  --colorarchive-emerald-tone-clear-hsl: hsl(120, 54%, 60%);
  --colorarchive-emerald-tone-clear-rgb: rgb(98, 208, 98);
}

AI Color Names

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

Design Context

BalancedTrustworthyGrowing
Common in

Finance · Insurance · Environmental

Pairs well with

White for clean professionalism, dark navy for authority, gold for premium

Design tip

The go-to for financial dashboards and environmental brands. Green conveys stability — use for success states and positive metrics.

Cultural context ▶

Green universally represents nature, growth, and money. In Islam, green is sacred. In Western finance, it signals profit.

Color Origins

Green family

The color of growth, currency, and the longest-running brands.

Heritage

Verdigris (copper acetate) gave medieval manuscripts their greens; it was unstable, eating through parchment over centuries. Terre verte (green earth) was used for under-painting flesh in the Italian tradition. Scheele's green and Paris green, both 19th-century arsenic compounds, killed an unknown number of wallpaper-makers and Victorian children before viridian and phthalo greens replaced them. Modern green pigments are remarkably stable; the iconic Brunswick green that became British Racing Green dates to the same chemistry.

Across cultures

Green is the dominant color of Islam — the Prophet's banner, the flags of many Muslim-majority nations, the domes of mosques. In Ireland green is national identity, partly through the shamrock and partly through the political binary with orange. In Japan, green and blue (ao/midori) were a single concept until recently; traffic 'green lights' there are still a deeper teal-ish shade. Across many cultures green simultaneously means growth, fertility, envy, and the supernatural.

In the wild

Starbucks' green has barely changed since 1971. John Deere has used essentially the same green since 1837 — the longest continuous brand color in commerce. The U.S. dollar is green because of the chemistry of camphor and copper sulfate, not branding. Whatsapp, Spotify, and Heineken all anchor on green; each chose it for a different reason (community, sound, Dutch heritage). Hospital scrubs were originally white but switched to green/teal because surgeons were getting after-image fatigue.

How it reads

Green is the hue the eye is most efficient at parsing — half of all our cone cells are tuned near 555nm. That makes green the easiest color to look at for long periods, which is why it dominates productivity software, 'go' indicators, and reading-friendly UI. At low saturation it reads as natural, calm, premium (sage, olive). At high saturation it reads as urgent or playful (Mountain Dew, Slack notifications). It carries one of the strongest semantic loads in product design: 'success', 'go', 'natural', 'safe'.

This particular tone

A confident mid-tone — this is the workhorse register of the hue, and the band where most successful brand colors live.

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 clear, mid-saturation register is the most common identity sweet spot — saturated enough to register as a 'real' color, restrained enough not to fight typography or photography placed over it.

Brands using a similar color

Within the public brand-guidelines reference catalog, these are the closest matches to #62D062.

  • Supabaseprimary
    Supabase Green · #3ECF8E
    →
  • Discordaccent
    Online Green · #57F287
    →
  • Slackaccent
    Slack Green · #2EB67D
    →

Cultures using a similar color

From the cultural-palette catalog, these regions feature a color close to #62D062.

  • MoroccoMint Tea Green
    #62A87C · Atlas mountain spearmint
    →
  • IcelandGlacial Cyan
    #75BBC1 · Vatnajökull ice cave light
    →
  • AustraliaReef Turquoise
    #3FBFB9 · Whitsunday lagoons
    →

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
Emerald Silk Clear
#81D981 · hsl(120, 54%, 68%)
Darker companion
Emerald Radiant Clear
#4AC94A · hsl(120, 54%, 54%)
Complementary counterpoint
Fuchsia Tone Clear
#D062D0 · hsl(300, 54%, 60%)
Analogous lead
Celadon Tone Clear
#62D090 · hsl(145, 54%, 60%)
Analogous echo
Moss Tone Clear
#87D062 · hsl(100, 54%, 60%)
Triadic +120°
Iris Tone Clear
#6262D0 · hsl(240, 54%, 60%)
Triadic +240°
Crimson Tone Clear
#D06262 · hsl(0, 54%, 60%)
Split-comp +150°
Plum Tone Clear
#9962D0 · hsl(270, 54%, 60%)
Split-comp +210°
Blush Tone Clear
#D06299 · hsl(330, 54%, 60%)
Export preview
Base: Emerald Tone Clear #62D062
Lighter companion: Emerald Silk Clear #81D981
Darker companion: Emerald Radiant Clear #4AC94A
Complementary counterpoint: Fuchsia Tone Clear #D062D0
Analogous lead: Celadon Tone Clear #62D090
Analogous echo: Moss Tone Clear #87D062
Triadic +120°: Iris Tone Clear #6262D0
Triadic +240°: Crimson Tone Clear #D06262
Split-comp +150°: Plum Tone Clear #9962D0
Split-comp +210°: Blush Tone Clear #D06299

Compare

See how Emerald Tone Clear compares side by side with related colors.

vsEmerald Silk ClearvsEmerald Radiant ClearvsFuchsia Tone ClearvsCeladon Tone ClearvsMoss Tone ClearvsIris Tone Clear

Nearest neighbors

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

Search by hex
Nearby match
Emerald Radiant Clear
#4AC94A · hsl(120, 54%, 54%)
Nearby match
Clover Tone Clear
#6BD062 · hsl(115, 54%, 60%)
Nearby match
Emerald Silk Clear
#81D981 · hsl(120, 54%, 68%)
Nearby match
Emerald Core Clear
#38BC38 · hsl(120, 54%, 48%)
Nearby match
Emerald Tone Soft
#76BC76 · hsl(120, 34%, 60%)
Nearby match
Emerald Tone Vivid
#4EE44E · hsl(120, 74%, 60%)

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
AAA8.1:1
Fuchsia Ink Faint
#272027
AAA8.2:1
Fuchsia Ink Muted
#2A1D2A
AAA8.3:1
Fuchsia Ink Dust
#2D1A2D
AAA8.3:1
Fuchsia Ink Soft
#301830
AAA8.3:1
Fuchsia Ink Clear
#371037
AAA8.2:1
Fuchsia Ink Vivid
#3E093E

Color Vision Simulation

How this color appears with different color vision deficiencies.

Full simulator
Deuteranopia
#988F8F
Protanopia
#9E9F88
Tritanopia
#6B9EA2
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Appears in collections
Tropical Modernist