The 50 Most Popular Brand Colors

by | Oct 12, 2016 | Branding, Design

While working on a branding project a few weeks ago, I happened to wonder what colors were most frequently used in brand identities.

I started poking around online, feeling sure someone had already done this research and neatly organized the results. However, I wasn’t really satisfied with what I found. I saw a number of eyecatching but generally meaningless infographics that look great on Pinterest but don’t really contain any practical information.

Since I couldn’t find the quantitative information I’d been hoping for, I took matters into my own hands and started doing some research. (It’s not not scientific-grade research, mind you, but at least good enough to help answer my original question.)

I started with BrandColors, which provides the color schemes of 456 different brands. From there, I was able to export a CSS file, which I then stripped down to 1,239 hexadecimal color codes, which I then converted to a decimal RGB format.

I was curious to try tallying them along basic color palettes, just to see which specific colors were most popular. I did this by writing a script that cycled through various palettes, comparing them with each of the 1,239 brand colors to measure the distance between them, and then sorting them by smallest distance to largest to find the nearest color matches.

Just for fun, I decided to use the 163 standard Crayola crayon colors. Here are the top 50 matches, based on frequency:

CountName
 79Outer Space
 60Midnight Blue
 56Maximum Red
 48Black
 47Mango Tango
 43Middle Yellow
 40Cerulean
 32Yellow-Orange
 31Eggplant
 28Red-Orange
 26White
 24Manatee
 23Geranium Lake
 23Charcoal Gray
 22Blue (I)
 22Maximum Green
 22Green
 17Inchworm
 17Denim
 17Green-Blue
 17Navy Blue
 16Razzmatazz
 15Asparagus
 14Maximum Blue
 14Dark Venetian Red
 14Orange-Red
 14Gray
 13Blue-Green
 13Cadet Blue
 13Burnt Orange
 13Tropical Rain Forest
 12Mountain Meadow
 12Pig Pink
 11Scarlet
 11Sunset Orange
 11Venetian Red
 11Fern
 11Cerulean Blue
 10Timberwolf
 10Red
 9Blue (II)
 9Blue-Violet
 9Shamrock
 9Pacific Blue
 9Middle Green Yellow
 8Robin’s Egg Blue
 7Blue-Gray
 7Indigo
 7Turquoise Blue
 7Periwinkle

A particular brand color being common or not common doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s good or bad in itself. However, this can be useful information to keep in mind when developing color schemes for a new brand. While there’s a certain advantage to having a distinctive color scheme, there may also be social, psychological, or cultural reasons why certain colors are seldom used.

There’s no disputing that color selection is one of the more complicated areas of design, but hopefully this information helps you with working out the right solution for your situation. At the very least, it satisfied my curiosity, and sometimes that’s enough!

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