Old-growth redwood grove, late afternoon light through the canopy
Redwood
#8B3A2A
rgb(139, 58, 42)
The deep red-brown of old-growth redwood bark
Bark
#6B4020
rgb(107, 64, 32)
Darker inner bark, exposed where the surface has peeled
Old Growth
#2A3818
rgb(42, 56, 24)
The dense shadow green of the forest floor
Rust Fern
#B05030
rgb(176, 80, 48)
Dried fronds at the base of the trees — orange-rust
Forest Floor
#4A5830
rgb(74, 88, 48)
Mid-tone moss and leaf litter in filtered light
Cream Lichen
#E8E0C8
rgb(232, 224, 200)
Pale lichen growing on fallen timber
Old-growth forests impose a particular visual language on the designer who works from them honestly: very deep values, a narrow temperature range anchored by red-brown and green, and small amounts of light that feel earned rather than given freely. Redwood Forest is built from this discipline. The palette has almost no middle ground — it commits to depth, with Cream Lichen functioning as the single deliberate relief note rather than a generic neutral.
Psychologically, very deep forest palettes activate feelings of shelter and significance — the precise opposite of open-landscape or sky palettes. Ancient forests have consistent cross-cultural associations with permanence, mystery, and the kind of scale that makes individual problems feel temporarily small. For brands, this translates into an authority that is earned through age and rootedness rather than declared through brightness or speed.
Redwood Forest is a natural fit for premium timber and craft furniture brands, forest conservation organizations, Pacific Northwest tourism, old-growth whisky and wine with a terroir narrative, and specialty outdoor gear that wants to communicate serious backcountry credibility. The palette also works beautifully in editorial contexts — literary journals, nature writing, and photographic books about wilderness.