Soft rainbow arc — muted coral, gold, pale green, sky, and violet
Soft Coral
#F0B0A0
rgb(240, 176, 160)
Warm pastel red-orange — the red of a soft rainbow
Soft Gold
#F0D898
rgb(240, 216, 152)
Gentle warm yellow — the orange-yellow arc
Soft Green
#B0DDB0
rgb(176, 221, 176)
Pale spring green — the mid-rainbow green
Soft Sky
#A8C8F0
rgb(168, 200, 240)
Pale blue — indigo and blue merged softly
Soft Violet
#C8B0E0
rgb(200, 176, 224)
Gentle violet — the rainbow's cool outer arc
A rainbow reduced to pastel weight loses none of its symbolic power — joy, inclusivity, hope, and celebration — while gaining the softness that makes it practically usable across a wide range of design contexts. Soft Rainbow desaturates each spectral hue to a similar light tonal weight, so the five colors coexist without any one demanding visual dominance. The result is a palette that feels simultaneously complete and restrained.
This kind of muted multi-hue set has wide application across children's education, diversity and inclusion branding, pride-adjacent content, spring and summer lifestyle design, and any context requiring a "full spectrum" visual statement without the intensity of saturated primaries. The colors are individually distinct enough to be recognizable as a rainbow reference while being soft enough for extended use in text-heavy layouts.
Sponsors
Each color in Soft Rainbow is carefully calibrated to function individually as well as in the set. Soft Coral works as a warm accent in minimal layouts; Soft Gold as a warming neutral background; Soft Green for botanical and wellness contexts; Soft Sky for anything requiring trust or calm; and Soft Violet for creative and expressive brand identities. This modularity makes the palette useful even when not all five colors are deployed simultaneously.
For illustrated content, the even tonal weight across all five colors makes Soft Rainbow particularly effective for pattern work, icon sets, and infographic systems where each element needs visual parity. Equal-weight colors prevent the hierarchy confusion that occurs when mixing saturated and pale hues in the same informational system.