#6B3D5C color code is #6B3D5C. Use this page to get all code formats, explore shades and tints, and find colors that work with #6b3d5c.
Relative luminance of #6B3D5C is 0.0724. Its WCAG contrast ratio is 8.58:1 against white and 2.45:1 against black. Use the card with the higher ratio for body text.
Practical guidance for using #6b3d5c (#6B3D5C) across four design contexts, derived from its hue, lightness, saturation, and WCAG contrast.
Use #6B3D5C (#6B3D5C) as primary text or icon color on white backgrounds — at 8.6:1 contrast it passes WCAG AAA for body copy. Avoid placing #6b3d5c text on dark surfaces; the contrast drops below the AA threshold.
As a brand color, #6B3D5C (#6B3D5C) reads as considered and grown-up and versatile across product tiers. It fits naturally into beauty, weddings, romance, soft-feminine brands. Pair it with a single bold accent so it doesn't read as too quiet. Test legibility on both your logo and small UI text before locking it in — saturation that works on a 200px logo can feel overpowering at favicon scale.
#6B3D5C flatters cool-leaning skin tones (pink, rosy, blue undertones) and works best in autumn/winter collections. Pair it with cool neutrals (charcoal, slate, off-white, black) and it works as a sophisticated alternative to navy. Deep cool tones photograph richly under indoor light and read as quiet luxury — strong choice for eveningwear.
#6B3D5C works as either a primary wall color or a strong accent — versatile across most rooms. As a wall color it pairs with white trim and warm wood; as an accent (sofa, chair, large art) it lifts a neutral room without overwhelming it. Test a large swatch against your room's natural light at three times of day before committing — mid-tone colors shift more than light or dark colors do.