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Acubi Color Palette: Every Shade, Hex Code, and How to Use Them
Acubi Aesthetic

The Acubi Color Palette

Every shade, every hex code, and the rule behind why no other colors belong here.

The acubi color palette is one of the most strictly defined in any fashion aesthetic. There are no bold primaries, no saturated tones, no colors that announce themselves. Every shade in the palette sits in the same family of muted neutrals and desaturated earth tones, which is precisely what makes it work. When every piece shares the same color temperature, everything mixes without effort.

This guide covers every color in the palette with its exact hex code, its role in an outfit, the tonal combination rules that make the aesthetic readable, and the few accent colors the aesthetic allows when used with restraint.

01 // Foundation Shades

The Core Neutrals

The foundation of every acubi outfit

Warm white
#F5F2EC
The lightest base. Used for tops, inner layers, and minimal canvas pieces. Warmer than pure white, avoids the clinical feel of bright white.
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Cream / ivory
#EDE8DC
The most used single shade in the aesthetic. Wide-leg trousers, knitwear, and longline coats in this tone anchor any outfit. Pairs with everything else in the palette.
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Oatmeal beige
#D9D0BE
The warmest mid-tone in the palette. Works for knitwear, trousers, and shackets. Slightly darker than cream so it creates subtle tonal contrast when layered.
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Sand / latte
#C4B89C
A deeper warm neutral that bridges beige and taupe. Works for structured outerwear and wide-leg trousers. Creates a grounded, earthy anchor in tonal outfits.
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Warm taupe
#B8A898
The transitional tone between warm and cool neutrals. Trousers, longline coats, and accessories in this shade keep outfits grounded without pulling warm or cold.
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Stone gray
#9B9890
A warm-leaning gray with no blue undertone. The cooler counterpart to taupe. Knitwear and layering pieces in this tone sit naturally next to every warm neutral in the palette.
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Warm charcoal
#6E6B65
A mid-dark neutral that avoids being truly dark. Outerwear, trousers, and accessories in this tone add depth without pulling the outfit toward monochrome black.
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Deep charcoal
#4A4845
The darkest tone before near-black. Longline coats and structured outerwear. Provides contrast in a light tonal outfit without breaking the warm neutral register.
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Near black
#1E1C1A
A warm near-black rather than true black (#000). Footwear, bags, and heavy outerwear. The slight warmth keeps it within the acubi palette rather than pulling industrial or harsh.
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02 // Spacing Accents

Accent Colors

Used sparingly — one at a time, never as a base

The acubi palette allows a small number of muted accent tones, but they follow a strict rule: they are never the starting point of an outfit. They appear in a single piece against an otherwise neutral base. The accent should feel accidental, not deliberate.

Camel
#C4965A
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Espresso
#6B4C38
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Dusty sage
#9BAF9B
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Dusty rose
#C4A89C
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Slate blue
#8A9BAF
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Click any hex code above to copy it to clipboard.

03 // Temperature Cohesion

The Tonal Rule

How the palette actually works in an outfit

The single most important principle in the acubi color palette is tonal harmony: every piece in an outfit sits within the same color temperature. You do not mix warm-undertone beiges with cool-undertone grays. You do not introduce a piece that creates a visual break. The palette is designed so that any combination of these shades reads naturally together, which is why the color temperature of every swatch is deliberately warm-leaning rather than neutral or cool.

Typical outfit — color proportion breakdown
Cream / oatmeal
Base — 60%
Stone gray / taupe
Layer — 30%
Near black
Anchor — 10%

The 60-30-10 split is a guideline, not a rule. The point is that light neutrals dominate, a mid-tone layer provides depth, and a dark anchor (usually footwear or outerwear) grounds the outfit.

04 // Curated Palettes

Proven Tonal Combinations

Six combinations that always work

All-cream tonal
Three shades of the same warm white family layered together. The subtle shade variation creates depth without any color contrast. Classic acubi monochrome.
#F5F2EC#EDE8DC#D9D0BE
Cream to charcoal
The widest tonal range in the palette. Light base, mid stone gray layer, deep charcoal outerwear or footwear. The most versatile combination for any season.
#EDE8DC#9B9890#4A4845
Earth tonal with black
Two warm earth mid-tones grounded by a near-black anchor. The near-black appears in footwear or a bag, not in clothing, to keep the outfit warm throughout.
#D9D0BE#B8A898#1E1C1A
Cream with camel accent
A neutral base with a camel knit or outerwear piece as the single warm accent. The camel reads as earth-adjacent to the cream base, not as a color contrast.
#EDE8DC#C4965A#4A4845
Cream with sage accent
Dusty sage as the single accent in an otherwise warm-neutral outfit. The sage must be muted enough to feel earthy, not botanical. A single layer piece only.
#F5F2EC#9BAF9B#6E6B65
Reverse tonal — dark base
Starting with a dark charcoal base and layering lighter tones on top. Less common in acubi but effective in autumn and winter. Dark wide-legs, stone gray knit, cream top layer.
#6E6B65#9B9890#EDE8DC
05 // Boundaries & Exceptions

What Belongs & What Does Not

The palette is defined as much by exclusion as inclusion

In the palette
  • Warm whites, creams, and ivories with a yellow or pink undertone
  • Beige and oatmeal with warm undertones
  • Taupe that leans warm rather than gray
  • Warm-leaning grays without a blue cast
  • Deep charcoals and near-black with warmth
  • Muted camel and espresso brown as single-piece accents
  • Dusty sage with gray in it, not bright or botanical
  • Dusty rose that is more gray than pink
  • Washed or faded versions of any neutral
Outside the palette
  • Pure bright white (#FFFFFF) — too clinical and cold
  • Cool grays with a blue or purple cast
  • Navy, cobalt, or any saturated blue
  • Bright green or yellow-green
  • Any neon, electric, or fluorescent tone
  • Bold red, orange, or fuchsia
  • Pastel pink, baby blue, or mint — too sweet
  • Bright camel or mustard yellow — too saturated
  • Any color you would describe as bright or bold
06 // Seasonal Variations

The Palette by Season

The same shades shift in emphasis across the year

Spring
Light tonal
Warm white and cream dominate. A dusty rose accent is the only color note. Light layers, sheer tops, linen pieces.
Summer
Minimal neutral
Fewest layers, fewest shades. Warm white or cream base with a single stone gray piece. Cropped silhouettes, minimal layering.
Autumn
Earth tonal
The palette shifts warmer. Sand, oatmeal, and camel tones lead. Knitwear season. The most latitude for the camel accent color.
Winter
Dark tonal
Charcoals and near-black anchor the outfit. A cream inner layer creates contrast. Maximum layering opportunity. Longline coats are the hero piece.
07 // Wardrobe Formulations

Color in Practice: Three Outfit Formulas

How the palette applies piece by piece

All-cream tonal
  • Warm white tee
  • Cream wide-leg trousers
  • Oatmeal oversized knit
  • Stone gray longline coat
  • Near-black loafers
Cream with camel accent
  • Cream ribbed tank
  • Oatmeal wide-leg trousers
  • Camel oversized knit
  • Deep charcoal coat
  • Near-black sneakers
Reverse tonal — dark base
  • Charcoal wide-leg trousers
  • Stone gray fitted top
  • Cream oversized shacket
  • Near-black ankle boots
  • Warm taupe mini bag
08 // FAQ Section

Frequently Asked Questions

Cream and oatmeal beige are the most used single shades in the acubi palette. They form the base of the majority of acubi outfits and appear in more pieces than any other tone. Warm white is a close second and is used primarily for inner layers and base tops. The palette has no single hero color because the entire aesthetic is built on tonal harmony rather than any one shade.

Yes, but it is near-black (#1E1C1A) rather than true black (#000000). The difference is subtle but important: true black has no warmth and creates a harsh visual break against the warm neutrals that form the rest of the palette. Near-black with a slight warm undertone reads as part of the same color family. Black appears primarily in footwear, bags, and outerwear, rarely in tops or base layers.

Yes, but only warm-leaning grays. The palette uses stone gray (#9B9890) and warm charcoal (#6E6B65), both of which have a slight warm or beige cast rather than a blue or cool cast. Cool grays with a blue or purple undertone break the warm color temperature that makes the palette cohesive. When shopping for gray pieces for an acubi wardrobe, hold them next to something warm-toned. If the gray looks blue or cool by comparison, it falls outside the palette.

A small number of muted accent tones are allowed: camel (#C4965A), espresso brown (#6B4C38), dusty sage (#9BAF9B), dusty rose (#C4A89C), and slate blue (#8A9BAF). The rule is that the accent appears in one piece only and is never the starting point of the outfit. The rest of the outfit must be from the core neutral palette. The accent should feel like a natural variation of the palette, not a deliberate color choice.

All three use neutral palettes, but the specific shades and how they are used differ. Clean girl leans toward cool whites, bright whites, and bright beige with more contrast. Quiet luxury uses camel, cream, and navy as key tones alongside warm neutrals, and allows slightly more color range because the aesthetic is about fabric quality rather than palette purity. Acubi is the most strictly warm-toned of the three and excludes any cool-cast shades or bold accent colors entirely.

The acubi nail palette follows the same logic as the clothing palette: milky whites, sheer nudes, warm beige, soft taupe, and warm-toned neutrals. The finish is typically milky or soft rather than opaque or glossy. French tips in warm white over a nude base are the most consistent nail look in the aesthetic. Bold nail colors, bright reds, or anything that would draw attention away from the outfit are outside the aesthetic.