Crimson, fire orange, mango yellow, and golden — flame meets fruit
Crimson
#C02010
rgb(192, 32, 16)
Deep vivid crimson — the base of the fire range, intense and grounding
Fire Orange
#E86020
rgb(232, 96, 32)
Active burn orange — the vivid color of wood fire at full combustion
Mango
#F8A020
rgb(248, 160, 32)
Ripe mango orange — warm, vivid, and instantly appetite-activating
Golden
#F8D040
rgb(248, 208, 64)
Bright golden yellow — the warmest, most luminous point of the range
Mango Fire is a high-energy, minimal four-color palette that combines two of the most instinctively appealing color associations in human perception: open flame and ripe tropical fruit. Crimson and Fire Orange cover the flame range — the base colors of combustion visible in fire from ember to active burn. Mango and Golden shift into the fruit register — the specific warm yellows and oranges of a fully ripe mango, sliced and exposed to full tropical sun. The four colors share a temperature and a family but tell distinctly different visual stories within it.
Despite having only four colors, Mango Fire is not a narrow palette. The jump from Crimson to Fire Orange to Mango covers a significant portion of the warm color spectrum, creating dramatic visual movement when the colors are placed in sequence. Golden completes the progression at a yellow that reads as warm and bright without transitioning into the greenish territory of acid yellow. The four colors work as individual accents and together in gradient, layered, or sequential composition.
Sponsors
Mango Fire is effective for tropical beverage brands, hot sauces and condiments, fruit drinks and energy beverages, summer seasonal campaigns, athletic and performance apparel brands wanting maximum visual energy, food photography color grading references, and any design context where pure warmth, energy, and appetite stimulation are the primary visual goals. The palette's simplicity makes it highly readable at small sizes and on physical materials where complex palettes lose their subtlety — four strong colors that work as well on a label or packaging as they do on a full-page digital spread.