Dusty Navy Blue

Dusty Navy Blue is a muted navy shade that blends classic depth with a soft, vintage feel.

#5A6C7D

rgb(90, 108, 125)

Color Formats

Different formats of the color

HEX

#5A6C7D

RGB

rgb(90, 108, 125)

HSL

hsl(209, 16%, 42%)

Color Shades

Different shades of the color

Lightest

#aabccd

Lighter

#8294a5

Base

#5A6C7D

Darker

#324455

Darkest

#0a1c2d

Complementary

Complementary colors are colors that are opposite to each other on the color wheel.

Analogous

Analogous colors are colors that are next to each other on the color wheel.

Pick _ Swatches

Relevant _ Article

01

Why Color Conversion Is a Daily Challenge for Designers and Developers

If you've ever had to look at a hex code in your design document and wanted to convert it to RGB for your CSS file, or conversely, then you know exactly what the issue is. You simply cannot convert color codes just by looking at them. A misplaced hex code could take your brand color from navy blue to grey and doing manual conversions between all the various colors is both wasteful and inefficient.

02

10 Color Tools Every Web Designer Needs in 2026 And Why One Platform Has Them All

Discover the 10 essential color tools professional web designers use daily — from palette generators to WCAG contrast checkers. See how Coloraccy replaces them all in one free platform.

03

Best Free Color Palette Generator for Web Designers in 2026 — Why Coloraccy Is the Smarter Choice

If you have spent any time designing websites, mobile apps, or brand identities, you already know how much time disappears into color decisions. Should this button be #3B82F6 or a shade darker? Does your background-text contrast actually pass WCAG AA? Does your palette feel cohesive or just accidental? These are not small questions — they are the difference between a product that feels polished and one that looks like it was assembled in a hurry.

04

How to Choose Brand Colors That Actually Work (Complete Guide)

Most brand color decisions are made backwards. A founder picks a color they like, a designer builds around it, and six months later the brand feels slightly off — not wrong enough to fix, but not quite right either. The colors work in isolation and fall apart in application.

Observe _ Spectrum