Jungle Floor
Jungle Floor records the green spectrum not at canopy level where light is bright and saturated, but at ground level where the light has been filtered many times through layers of leaves above. The result is a different relationship with green: the dark tones here include more brown and shadow than the pure bright greens of open meadows; the light tones age toward yellow-green as they describe dried, sunlit, or lichen-covered surfaces rather than fresh growing things. Deep Jungle is the color of dense forest shadow when your eye has not yet adjusted — a very dark near-black with a green temperature that gives away the surroundings.
Dark Fern opens to a readable forest green — the undersides of large tropical leaves, present without brilliance. The shift to Olive marks the point where yellow becomes visible in the palette: olive is the color of dried grass, sun-aged leaves, and forest floor vegetation that has spent time in low light. Warm Moss continues this warm-green progression at a mid-light tone — softer and more decorative, closer to the kinds of sage and military greens that have been staple fashion and interior colors for decades. Pale Lichen completes the range with a gentle yellow-green that reads as warm khaki in many contexts.
The sustained warmth in this palette distinguishes it from cooler nature-green ranges and makes it particularly useful in design contexts where green is used as a neutral supporting a warmer overall palette rather than as a primary accent. Interior design, fashion, outdoor and utility branding, craft and artisan contexts, and editorial food and travel work are all applications where a warm, muted green palette functions better than saturated or cool alternatives.
Jungle Floor pairs well with warm neutrals — cream, stone, terracotta, and aged wood tones — creating earth-combination palettes that are currently popular in both fashion and interiors. It also contrasts effectively with bright coral or saffron if a more graphic, pattern-forward treatment is required.