← Back to Grays
Grays

Rare Wine

Psychology

Its sophisticated depth suggests maturity and refined taste, fostering a sense of quiet contemplation and luxury.

History & Origin

Dark, complex reds and purples were often used in still life paintings of the Dutch Golden Age to depict luxury goods and evoke a sense of richness.

Combinations

Harmonious pairings from this color. Click any swatch to copy.

Open in Generator →

Complementary

Maximum contrast — logos, CTAs, bold pairs

Edit

Split complementary

Vibrant balance without the tension of a straight complement

Edit

Triadic

Playful energy — let one color lead, use the rest as accents

Edit

Analogous

Smooth, calming transitions — interfaces and nature-inspired work

Edit

Values & Conversions

Copy any format — sRGB, print, and perceptual OKLCH.

CSS

Accessibility

WCAG 2.2 contrast for the pairings designers use most.

Recommended

Readable body text at this size.

13.73:1AAA

Use white text for body copy, labels, and controls.

✓ Small text✓ Large text

All pairings

Aa
Black on color
1.53:1Fail
Aa
Color on black
1.53:1Fail
Advanced contrast checker →

Variations

Shades, tints, and tones in 10% steps — built for real UI states.

Darker steps for hover, shadow, and pressed states.

Design token scale

50–950 ramp for systems work

Color vision

How this color reads under common forms of color vision deficiency.

Simulate in checker →
Standard visionBaseline
Deuteranopia~5% of men
Protanopia~1% of men

Similar colors

Perceptually closest named colors in the library.

More in Grays

View all →