Closest web-safe match: #CC6666

Color Details and Palettes for #B86252

Details about the color Too Hot to Handle#B86252

Conversions, palettes, contrast & design ideas for this color.

Red family Warm WCAG ink: white
HEX #B86252 RGB rgb(184, 98, 82) HSL hsl(9, 42%, 52%) CMYK cmyk(0%, 47%, 55%, 28%)

Color profile

About Color Hex #B86252

#B86252 is a warm color from the Red family, closest in name to “Too Hot to Handle”. In RGB it is rgb(184, 98, 82); in HSL, hsl(9, 42%, 52%).

The color Too Hot to Handle, with hexadecimal code #b86252, falls within the red color family, a hue strongly linked to passion, urgency, and primal energy. Across cultures, red ranges from the luck of Chinese New Year to the romance of Western Valentine's Day. Additionally, it evokes emotions such as Passion, Energy, Love, Excitement, Danger and Desire. In many Eastern cultures, red symbolizes luck, prosperity, and happiness, often used in festivals and weddings. In Western cultures, red can symbolize passion, love, and sometimes danger. With a moderate saturation of 42%, it has a softened, muted quality that lends sophistication and works well for backgrounds and secondary elements. With a mid-range lightness of 52%, it offers excellent versatility—readable as text on light backgrounds and visible as an element on dark ones. This color is ideal for designs that aim to express Passion, Energy, Love, Excitement, Danger, or Desire. It can be effectively used in web design, branding, and marketing materials to attract attention and convey specific messages.

Key facts

RGB 184, 98, 82 red · green · blue HSL 9° 42% 52% hue · sat · light HSV 9° 55% 72% design-app pickers CMYK 0 47 55 28 print inks, % Luminance 0.195 0 dark → 1 light On black 4.91:1 ✓ AA contrast ratio On white 4.28:1 ✕ AA contrast ratio Web-safe #CC6666 closest web-safe Best text black ideal foreground Character Vivid warm · red family

The story of this color

History, Usage, Psychology & Design Ideas for #B86252

Too Hot to Handle (#B86252) belongs to the Red color family.

With moderate saturation and balanced lightness, this muted tone feels sophisticated and understated. Muted hues like this excel in editorial design, professional portfolios, and interior spaces that seek calm refinement.

Historical Background

Red ochre is among the earliest pigments used by humans, found in cave paintings over 40,000 years old. The precious cochineal dye—extracted from scale insects—was so valuable in colonial-era trade that it rivaled gold. In imperial China, vermilion lacquer adorned thrones and temples, while Roman generals painted their faces red for triumphal processions through the streets of Rome.

Design & Usage Tips

Red commands instant attention, making it the top choice for call-to-action buttons, sale banners, and emergency signage. Use it selectively to avoid overwhelming users—pair red accents with neutral backgrounds (white, light gray, or cream) to create high-impact focal points that guide the eye without fatigue.

Positioned on the warm side of the color wheel (hue 9°), it naturally draws the eye and creates a sense of closeness—making it effective for calls to action, food photography, and hospitality branding. At 42% saturation, the color has a muted, sophisticated quality that pairs well with bolder accents. It works as a background, a border, or a secondary element in layered compositions.

Psychological Impact

Red accelerates heart rate and triggers primal alertness, linking it to passion, urgency, and excitement. In marketing, red increases impulse buying; in UX, red signals errors or critical states. Culturally, red spans love (Western Valentine's Day) and luck (Chinese New Year).

With a mid-range lightness of 52%, this tone is highly versatile: dark enough to serve as body text on white, yet light enough to stand out on charcoal or navy backgrounds.

Creative Design Ideas

Combine a rich crimson with gold foil for luxury packaging. In web design, use a single red accent button on a monochrome page for maximum conversion impact. For sports branding, pair red with black and white for aggressive, high-energy team identities.

Every format

#B86252 Color Conversions

Every way to write Too Hot to Handle — one-tap copy on every format; tap on any card to learn what it is and when to use it.

12 formats
HEX Web
#B86252

Hexadecimal is the web’s universal color notation — two digits each for red, green and blue. Drop it straight into HTML, CSS or any design tool.

RGB Screen
rgb(184, 98, 82)

RGB is the additive Red-Green-Blue model every screen uses to emit light. The default choice for websites, apps and on-screen UI.

HSL Web
hsl(9, 42%, 52%)

HSL breaks a color into Hue, Saturation and Lightness — the most intuitive way to lighten, darken or mute a color in CSS.

HSV HSB Design
hsv(9, 55%, 72%)

HSV (also called HSB) maps Hue, Saturation and Value/Brightness. It is the model behind the color pickers in Photoshop, Figma and most design apps.

HWB CSS 4
hwb(9 32% 28%)

HWB blends a pure hue with Whiteness and Blackness — a painter-friendly model added in CSS Color 4 for quick tints and shades.

CMYK Print
cmyk(0%, 47%, 55%, 28%)

CMYK is the subtractive Cyan-Magenta-Yellow-Black ink model. Use these values when preparing artwork for a printer or commercial press.

OKLCH Modern
oklch(59.28% 0.114 31.73)

OKLCH is a modern, perceptually-uniform space (Lightness, Chroma, Hue). It powers smooth gradients and accessible palettes in today’s CSS.

OKLab Modern
oklab(59.28% 0.097 0.060)

OKLab is the Cartesian form of OKLCH — ideal for blending and interpolating colors without the muddy midpoints older spaces produce.

CIELAB L*a*b* Perceptual
L: 51.31, a: 33.03, b: 24.62

CIELAB is a device-independent, perceptually-uniform space. It is the standard for measuring color difference (ΔE) and matching across devices.

LCH Perceptual
L: 51.31, C: 41.19, H: 36.70

LCH is CIELAB in cylindrical form — Lightness, Chroma and Hue — letting you adjust vividness and hue while staying perceptually even.

XYZ CIE Science
X: 25.66, Y: 19.53, Z: 10.40

CIE XYZ is the 1931 master space that underpins every other model here — the scientific bridge used to convert between color systems.

Decimal int Code
12083794

The 24-bit integer value of the color — handy for databases, APIs, game engines and low-level graphics code.

Channel breakdown

RGB Color Percentages for #B86252

How much red, green and blue light mixes into Too Hot to Handle.

Red 184/255 50.6% Green 98/255 26.9% Blue 82/255 22.5%

Percentages show each channel's share of the total light (R + G + B) in Too Hot to Handle.

Ink coverage

CMYK Ink Levels & Print Guide for #B86252

Ink needed to reproduce Too Hot to Handle in four-color print. Heaviest ink: Yellow.

0% CYAN 47% MAGENTA 55% YELLOW 28% KEY

Print tip: treat these values as a starting point — final output depends on printer profile, paper stock and calibration.

Accessibility · WCAG

Luminance & Contrast for #B86252

How bright Too Hot to Handle is, and how far black and white text clear each WCAG bar.

Relative luminance 0.195
0 · dark1 · light

Contrast ratio · 1:1 → 21:1 (log scale)

Aa Black text 4.91:1 ✓ AA ✕ AAA ✓ Large
Aa White text 4.28:1 ✕ AA ✕ AAA ✓ Large

Developer shortcuts

Quick CSS Snippets for #B86252

Copy-and-paste CSS for Too Hot to Handle — per-line copy, or grab the whole block.

too-hot-to-handle.css
background-color: #B86252;
color: #B86252;
border: 2px solid #B86252;
background-color: rgb(184, 98, 82);
background-color: hsl(9, 42%, 52%);
--color: #B86252;

Shades · light to dark

#B86252 Monochrome Palette

Lighter and darker steps of Too Hot to Handle — the color's full brightness range in one strip.

#F8EFEE
#EDD8D4
#E3C0BA
#D8A9A0
#CD9186
#C37A6C
#B86252
#9C5346
#814539
#65362D
#4A2721
#2E1915
#120A08

The dot marks the original color. Hover any shade to copy its hex or open its color page.

Harmony · 180° apart

#B86252 Complementary Palette

Two colors opposite on the wheel — maximum contrast for attention-grabbing accents.

#B86252
#51A9B8

The dot marks the original color. Hover any shade to copy its hex or open its color page.

Harmony · adjacent hues

#B86252 Analogic Palette

Neighboring hues on the wheel — harmonious, calm combinations that feel unified.

#B86252
#B89451
#B85175
#A9B851
#B851A9
#75B851
#9451B8

The dot marks the original color. Hover any shade to copy its hex or open its color page.

Harmony · 120° apart

#B86252 Triadic Palette

Three colors evenly spaced on the wheel — vibrant and energetic, yet balanced.

#B86252
#51B861
#6151B8

The dot marks the original color. Hover any shade to copy its hex or open its color page.

Harmony · 90° apart

#B86252 Quad Palette

Four colors evenly spaced on the wheel (tetradic) — rich schemes with multiple accents.

#B86252
#75B851
#51A9B8
#9451B8

The dot marks the original color. Hover any shade to copy its hex or open its color page.

Accessibility

Color Blindness Simulation for #B86252

How Too Hot to Handle reads across five kinds of color vision — a ✓ Friendly verdict means the color difference stays distinguishable for that vision type.

#B86252
#989E57
#939256
#B4595A
#737373
Normal vision full color Deuteranopia green weakness ✕ Not friendly Protanopia red weakness ✕ Not friendly Tritanopia blue-yellow weakness ✓ Friendly Achromatopsia total color blindness ✕ Not friendly

The dot marks the original color. Hover any shade to copy its hex.

Harmony overview

Color Harmonies for #B86252

The lead color from each harmony scheme, side by side — a shortcut to the full palettes above.

#51A9B8
#B89451
#51B861
#75B851
Complementary opposite hue Analogous adjacent hue Triadic 120° apart Tetradic (Quad) 90° apart

Perceptually nearby

#B86252 Nearby Colors

A step away in brightness, richness or shade — each still feels like the same color.

Himalayan Salt#CC7766
Hot Sauce#AA5544
Island Coral#DD8877
Picante#994433
Conker#BB5544
Bruschetta#AA6655
Caramel Dream#BB6644
Too Hot to Handle#BB6655

From the color-name library

Colors Similar to #B86252

The closest named colors to #B86252 — same mood, each with its own character.

Too Hot to Handle#BF6153
Tandoori#BB5C4D
Barbecue#C26157
Bruschetta#B2654E
Peach Dunes#B3695F
Dried Tomatoes#AB6057
Cedar Chest#C95A49
Clay#B66A50
Red Cent#AD654C
Firebug#CD5C51
Rustling Leaves#AD6961
Spiced#BB715B

Looking for more Red shades? Browse Red colors →

Inspiration

Explore Vibrant Images Featuring Too Hot to Handle (#b86252)

Curated Unsplash photos that carry the mood of Too Hot to Handle — hover any tile to download it or view the original.

Good to know

Frequently Asked Questions about #B86252

#B86252 is a warm color from the Red family. Its closest matched name is “Too Hot to Handle”, matched perceptually with the CIEDE2000 color-difference formula. In RGB it is rgb(184, 98, 82); in HSL, hsl(9, 42%, 52%).
In RGB, #B86252 is rgb(184, 98, 82); in HSL it is hsl(9, 42%, 52%); and in CMYK — the model used for print — it is cmyk(0%, 47%, 55%, 28%).
#B86252 has a contrast ratio of 4.91:1 against black and 4.28:1 against white. For readability, black body text meets the WCAG AA threshold of 4.5:1 on it, while white does not.
The direct complement of #B86252 is #51A9B8 (opposite on the color wheel). For ready-made combinations, this page includes monochrome, analogous, triadic and tetradic palettes built from #B86252 in the palette sections above.