Broken Bedrock in the Wracking

#190e21 RGB(25,14,33)

About this color

Broken Bedrock in the Wracking settles into a deep violet territory with a moderate quality that feels cool — captured at #190e21, RGB(25, 14, 33).

#190e21RGB(25, 14, 33)

HSL 275° · 40% saturation · 9% lightness

🧠

Psychology

At deep values violet feels rich and contemplative — a colour of ceremony and introspection.

🏛️

History

Mauveine, the first synthetic dye, was discovered by accident in 1856 by eighteen-year-old William Perkin — a purple that sparked an industrial revolution in colour.

✏️

Design use

From a design perspective, this shade excels as a background for light-coloured text, as a deep accent stripe, or as an anchoring tone in dark-mode interfaces. It pairs naturally with off-whites, warm creams, and metallic highlights.

🎭

Colour pairings

Looking at colour relationships, violet finds its complement in yellow-green — a combination that feels both botanical and somewhat surreal. Softer companions include warm greys, dusty pinks, and aged golds.

⚖️ Contrast checker👁 Colour blindness🌈 Gradient🎨 Colour mixer

Color formats

Name
Broken Bedrock in the Wracking
HEX
#190e21
RGB
rgb(25,14,33)
RGB%
rgb(9.8%,5.5%,12.9%)
HSL
hsl(275,40%,9%)
HSV
hsv(275,58%,13%)
CMYK
cmyk(24,58,0,87)
LAB
lab(6,10,-11)
LCH
lch(6,15,312)
sRGB
(0.098,0.055,0.129)
HEX8
#190e21ff
CSS Name
Decimal
025014033

Similar colors

Color variants

Color info

Lightness
9%
Saturation
40%
Hue
275°
Chroma
15
Temperature
WarmCool
Contrast Preview
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

Share