Pantone2025
Mocha Mousse
A grounded mocha brown with a soft, creamy undertone, chosen for its comfort and quiet strength.
#A47864
View detailsPantone’s Color of the Year 2025 is Mocha Mousse (PANTONE 17-1230), a creamy mocha brown that feels grounded, tactile, and easy to pair across brands, interiors, and UI.
What color is Mocha Mousse?
- Mid-depth mocha brown with a soft cream note—think latte foam over cocoa.
- Sits between taupe and milk chocolate; reads neutral enough for long-term use.
- Works as a base or accent because it keeps warmth without tipping orange.
Why it’s the Color of the Year
- Aligns with the “warm minimal” shift: people want comfort and calm without bright saturation.
- A grounded neutral that bridges digital and physical products (packaging, devices, apps).
- Plays well with craft signals (wood, linen, metal), supporting premium and sustainable narratives.
Mocha Mousse values (HEX/RGB/CMYK/CSS copy-ready)
- HEX
#A47864 - RGB
164, 120, 100 - CMYK
0, 27, 39, 36 - CSS
color: #A47864;/--pantone-2025: #A47864; - Medium-low value, mid saturation; holds neutral online without skewing orange.
Is it warm or cool? Compared with close neighbors
- Warm-leaning brown built from red + yellow; like a latte with cocoa depth.
- Versus terracotta (
#C26B5E): Mocha Mousse is calmer and less pink. - Versus smoky taupe (
#918075): Mocha Mousse is richer and more cinnamon, great with metals. - Against cool grays or blue-greens, it instantly adds human warmth and tactility.
Why it reads premium (color psychology & mood keywords)
- Brown = stability, craft, heritage; the creamy undertone keeps it approachable.
- Keywords: soothing, slow living, woodsy, grounded luxury, tactile calm.
- Resonates with metal, wood grain, linen—materials that signal cost and texture.
- As a background, it lowers noise and lets product photography or key copy stand out.
4 palettes (Style / Home / Brand / UI)
- Style:
#A47864/#F6F2EC/#4B342A/#C3A68A/#5B6B73 - Home:
#A47864/#E8E0D2/#2C2A28/#CBAE93/#8C7358 - Brand:
#A47864/#0F172A/#F4F6F8/#B67A4E/#D3A27A - UI:
#A47864/#111827/#E5E7EB/#F5F3EF/#D0B8A0
How to use it in different scenes (Home / Style / Print / Web)
- Home: Paint accent walls or soft furnishings, pair with bone white and wood; brass lighting lifts the palette.
- Style: Leather/suede pieces in Mocha Mousse; base with ivory or smoky gray; anchor with deep coffee shoes/bags.
- Print: Use as cover/packaging blocks, then add debossing, foil, or textured stock for luxe tactility.
- Web: Works as page or card background; keep text charcoal for AA contrast; use copper or gauzy white for CTAs.
Pitfalls to avoid
- Avoid huge areas of saturated orange-red—it muddies the brown; use dusty rose or copper instead.
- On UI backgrounds, do not drop body text to mid-gray; keep high contrast.
- Yellowish paper will darken it; choose neutral or cool white stock for print.
- Neon green/blue nearby pushes it sporty/cheap; choose muted greens or teal-grays.
FAQ
- Q: How is it different from coffee brown or khaki? A: It has more cream and a red undertone, so it stays soft rather than dusty.
- Q: Does it work in dark mode? A: Yes as a secondary surface; keep the main background deeper charcoal for contrast.
- Q: Do I need Pantone permission? A: Using the Pantone number for brand assets requires official licensing; inspirational use typically does not.
- Q: Will it flatter varied skin tones? A: The warm, low-value brown is friendly to yellow and neutral undertones; add a lighter inner layer to brighten the face.