Earth Tones Picker
Pick a warm earth tone like terracotta, ochre, olive or clay and copy any shade of it as HEX, RGB or HSL.
Click any shade to select it, or use Copy HEX for the selected color.
Picking an earth tone, step by step
- Choose an earth tone: terracotta, clay, ochre, olive, moss or umber, each as a full ramp.
- Click a step to land on the exact warmth and depth you want.
- Copy the HEX, with RGB and HSL alongside, for your design or moodboard.
- Build a wider scheme around it with the Scheme Generator.
Terracotta, ochre, olive and other earth tone HEX codes
Earth tones take their names from natural materials, which is the easiest way to remember them. Here are the staples with a representative HEX and their source in nature:
What makes a color an earth tone?
Earth tones are warm hues held at low saturation, so they echo the colors of soil, clay, stone and foliage rather than anything bright or synthetic. The warmth is what separates them from plain neutrals, and the muted saturation is what keeps them from reading as primary orange or green. That mix is why a room or a layout in earth tones feels grounded and calm.
Earth tones vs neutrals: the difference
It is easy to lump earth tones in with neutrals, but they are not the same. A true neutral is close to colorless; an earth tone keeps a clear warm hue, it is just muted. In practice earth tones work as warm, characterful near-neutrals, which is why they pair so well with a genuinely neutral cream or charcoal.
Why earth tones feel timeless
Bright trend colors date quickly, and that is exactly where earth tones win. Because they borrow from materials that have looked the same for thousands of years, a palette built on clay and olive reads as considered rather than of-the-moment. For brands that want to feel established and natural rather than loud, earth tones are usually the safer long-term bet.
Designs that suit earth tones
- Natural, organic, craft and sustainable brands.
- Cozy, autumnal and rustic interiors and moodboards.
- Warm backgrounds that stay quiet without going flat gray.
- Earthy schemes lifted straight from a landscape photo with Palette From Image.
A warm hue held at low saturation, echoing soil, clay, stone and foliage.
No. Neutrals are nearly colorless, while earth tones keep a clear warm hue that is simply muted.
Terracotta sits around #E2725B, a muted orange named after fired clay.
Cream, charcoal and other near-neutrals, plus a deeper earth tone as an accent, keep an earthy palette balanced.