Myrtle Green sits in the cyan / teal family, with the hex code #317873 mapping to rgb(49, 120, 115) in RGB and hsl(175.8, 42%, 33.1%) in HSL. In OKLCH it carries 53% perceptual lightness and 0.071 chroma — a moderately saturated, dark reading that behaves well as a primary, accent or decisive colour in modern interfaces. Cyan sits exactly where blue meets green and inherits the calm of both. It reads as clean, modern and slightly futuristic, which is why so many cloud, AI and medical brands gravitate to it — it feels technical without feeling cold.
Cyan sits exactly where blue meets green and inherits the calm of both. It reads as clean, modern and slightly futuristic, which is why so many cloud, AI and medical brands gravitate to it — it feels technical without feeling cold.
Cyan washes out against bright backgrounds — it almost always needs at least 30% lightness reduction to clear AA on white. Watch saturation in dark mode too, where neon cyans bloom.
#317873rgb(49, 120, 115)hsl(175.8, 42%, 33.1%)hsv(175.8, 59.2%, 47.1%)lch(45.89% 24.46 190.13)oklch(52.65% 0.0711 188.9)lab(45.89% -24.08 -4.3):root {
--color: #317873;
--color-rgb: rgb(49, 120, 115);
--color-hsl: hsl(175.8, 42%, 33.1%);
--color-oklch: oklch(52.65% 0.0711 188.9);
}How myrtle green performs as foreground text on common surfaces, scored with WCAG 2.1.
Tints are produced by mixing myrtle green with progressively more white.
Shades are produced by mixing myrtle green with progressively more black.
Tones are produced by mixing myrtle green with progressively more gray, lowering chroma while keeping lightness.