Harvest Gold
HEX: #DA9100 | Modern Palette
Color Specifications
#DA9100
218, 145, 0
39°, 100% ,42%
0, 33, 100, 15
About Harvest Gold
Harvest Gold (#DA9100) is a color with RGB(218, 145, 0) and HSL(39.9°, 100%, 42.7%). It is commonly associated with Energetic, Bold moods. In design, it fits Vivid, Warm styles and is suitable for Text, Button, Accent. Its complementary color is #0049DA, which creates strong contrast. Its triadic palette includes #00DA91 and #9100DA. The name comes from Harvest Gold (English).
- HEX: #DA9100
- RGB: 218, 145, 0
- HSL: 39.9°, 100%, 42.7%
- Mood: Energetic, Bold
- Style: Vivid, Warm
- Use case: Text, Button, Accent
- Complementary color: #0049DA
- Triadic colors: #00DA91, #9100DA
- The name comes from Harvest Gold (English).
Live Components
Color Palettes
Harvest Gold #DA9100 is used in Monochromatic, Neutral + Accent, Analogous, 3 + 1 + 1 palettes, giving designers ready-made combinations for backgrounds, surfaces, accents, and interface elements.
Color Harmonies
Harvest Gold #DA9100 pairs with #0049DA as its complementary color, and #00DA91 and #9100DA in triadic combinations. These harmony relationships help create balanced color combinations for UI, branding, and design work.
Frequently Asked Questions
Name, History & Etymology
History
The color 'Harvest Gold' became immensely popular in the United States and other Western countries during the 1960s and 1970s. It was a staple color for home appliances (refrigerators, ovens, dishwashers), automobiles, bathroom fixtures, and interior decor. It was part of a palette of earthy, warm tones that also included Avocado Green and Burnt Orange, reflecting a shift in aesthetic preferences from the brighter, more pastel colors of earlier decades. Its popularity waned significantly by the 1980s, often becoming associated with outdated decor.
First Recorded Use
The term 'Harvest Gold' as a specific color name, particularly for consumer goods, gained prominence in the 1960s and 1970s.
Cultural Associations
Harvest Gold is strongly associated with the mid-century modern aesthetic and the domestic interiors of the 1960s and 1970s. It evokes a sense of nostalgia for many who grew up during that era. While once ubiquitous, its decline in popularity led to it being seen as a somewhat kitschy or 'retro' color. In contemporary design, it occasionally sees a resurgence in vintage-inspired themes or as an accent color, but rarely with the dominance it once held.
Code Snippets
/* Background */
.element {
background-color: #DA9100;
}
/* Text */
.element {
color: #DA9100;
}
/* Border */
.element {
border: 1px solid #DA9100;
}
/* Linear gradient to complementary */
.element {
background: linear-gradient(
to right,
#DA9100,
#0049DA
);
}
/* Radial gradient */
.element {
background: radial-gradient(
circle,
#DA9100,
#0049DA
);
}
// SCSS variable
$harvest-gold: #DA9100;
// With RGB channels (useful for rgba() usage)
$harvest-gold-r: 218;
$harvest-gold-g: 145;
$harvest-gold-b: 0;
// Usage
.element {
background-color: $harvest-gold;
color: rgba($harvest-gold-r, $harvest-gold-g, $harvest-gold-b, 0.8);
}