Eternal Flame
#a13f49
Warmer brick-rose with fiery saturation, deeper than nearby
About Eternal Flame
Eternal Flame is the orange you notice after the flash fades on a studio set, when the lights settle and you can see the embers under the surface. It's warmer than the rosey reds nearby, but it doesn't go brown like Chocolate Chilli. And unlike Chubby Kiss, it doesn't feel restless. This one holds steady, with a slightly deeper undertone that reads like firelight instead of fruit candy.
I use it for dashboards and finance apps when the UI needs a confident accent without turning into urgency. Think subscription status chips, payment banners, editorial header bars, and moderation states that should feel "active" rather than "warning." It also works well in commerce product modules where you want warmth to guide the eye, not shout.
Pair it with charcoal or cool grays for contrast, and it stays defined on dark backgrounds. If you place it next to Intrigue Red, you'll see the difference fast: Eternal Flame leans orange and smoky, while Intrigue Red stays cleaner and more red-forward.
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Contrast checker
WCAG 2.1 contrast ratios. AA requires 4.5:1 for normal text, 3:1 for large. AAA requires 7:1 / 4.5:1.
On White #ffffff
On Gray 100 #f5f5f5
On Gray 900 #18181b
On Black #000000
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