What the Border upon Permanent Pacing

#5d4a49 RGB(93,74,73)

About this color

What the Border upon Permanent Pacing occupies the dark, muted end of the red spectrum, defined by its coordinates #5d4a49 — RGB(93, 74, 73).

#5d4a49RGB(93, 74, 73)

HSL 3° · 12% saturation · 33% lightness

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Psychology

Dark reds carry connotations of power, authority and depth — think burgundy-tinted boardrooms and aged wine labels.

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History

In ancient Rome, a particular shade of red — minium — was so valued that the scribes who illuminated manuscripts were called 'rubricators' after the colour they used for headings.

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Design use

Practically speaking, this deep red is most at home 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.

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Colour pairings

When it comes to colour harmony, pair this red with navy for classic contrast, with gold for a rich celebratory feel, or with soft pink and dusty rose for tonal warmth.

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Color formats

Name
What the Border upon Permanent Pacing
HEX
#5d4a49
RGB
rgb(93,74,73)
RGB%
rgb(36.5%,29%,28.6%)
HSL
hsl(3,12%,33%)
HSV
hsv(3,22%,36%)
CMYK
cmyk(0,20,22,64)
LAB
lab(33,8,4)
LCH
lch(33,9,27)
sRGB
(0.365,0.29,0.286)
HEX8
#5d4a49ff
CSS Name
Decimal
093074073

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Color variants

Color info

Lightness
33%
Saturation
12%
Hue
Chroma
9
Temperature
WarmCool
Contrast Preview
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

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