Dark Sea Green sits in the green family, with the hex code #8FBC8F mapping to rgb(143, 188, 143) in RGB and hsl(120, 25.1%, 64.9%) in HSL. In OKLCH it carries 75% perceptual lightness and 0.080 chroma — a moderately saturated, dark reading that behaves well as a primary, accent or decisive colour in modern interfaces. Green is the hue the human eye is best adapted to discriminate — half of the cone photoreceptors peak inside the green band. Brands use it to signal nature, growth, money, safety and "go", with cooler greens reading as trustworthy and warmer greens as energetic.
Green is the hue the human eye is best adapted to discriminate — half of the cone photoreceptors peak inside the green band. Brands use it to signal nature, growth, money, safety and "go", with cooler greens reading as trustworthy and warmer greens as energetic.
Green and red are the two hues most affected by colour-vision deficiency. Never communicate state with green alone — pair every "success green" with an icon, label or shape.
#8FBC8Frgb(143, 188, 143)hsl(120, 25.1%, 64.9%)hsv(120, 23.9%, 73.7%)lch(72.11% 28.46 141.27)oklch(75.09% 0.0797 144.73)lab(72.11% -22.2 17.81):root {
--color: #8fbc8f;
--color-rgb: rgb(143, 188, 143);
--color-hsl: hsl(120, 25.1%, 64.9%);
--color-oklch: oklch(75.09% 0.0797 144.73);
}How dark sea green performs as foreground text on common surfaces, scored with WCAG 2.1.
Tints are produced by mixing dark sea green with progressively more white.
Shades are produced by mixing dark sea green with progressively more black.
Tones are produced by mixing dark sea green with progressively more gray, lowering chroma while keeping lightness.