Bisque sits in the warm orange family, with the hex code #FFE4C4 mapping to rgb(255, 228, 196) in RGB and hsl(32.5, 100%, 88.4%) in HSL. In OKLCH it carries 93% perceptual lightness and 0.051 chroma — a desaturated, light reading that behaves well as a background, surface or supporting tone in modern interfaces. Orange combines red's urgency with yellow's optimism, landing on a hue that feels friendly without losing energy. It is the colour of recommendations, "+1" social signals and sunsets — inviting rather than aggressive.
Orange combines red's urgency with yellow's optimism, landing on a hue that feels friendly without losing energy. It is the colour of recommendations, "+1" social signals and sunsets — inviting rather than aggressive.
Pure orange rarely passes WCAG AA against white at body sizes — reserve it for headings, icons or buttons with explicit ≥4.5:1 fallback text colour.
#FFE4C4rgb(255, 228, 196)hsl(32.5, 100%, 88.4%)hsv(32.5, 23.1%, 100%)lch(92.23% 20.16 72.62)oklch(93.29% 0.0514 71.85)lab(92.23% 6.02 19.24):root {
--color: #ffe4c4;
--color-rgb: rgb(255, 228, 196);
--color-hsl: hsl(32.5, 100%, 88.4%);
--color-oklch: oklch(93.29% 0.0514 71.85);
}How bisque performs as foreground text on common surfaces, scored with WCAG 2.1.
Tints are produced by mixing bisque with progressively more white.
Shades are produced by mixing bisque with progressively more black.
Tones are produced by mixing bisque with progressively more gray, lowering chroma while keeping lightness.