Let It Snow
#d8f1f4
About Let It Snow
I keep noticing Let It Snow in mockups like fresh breath against a gray UI: it reads as a very light, cool surface, but it never turns slick or icy. Compared to Castle in the Sky, it's a touch more luminous and slightly more mint-leaning, so it feels clearer on the screen instead of just "balanced." And unlike Jet d'Eau, it's less green-cyan and more neutral-cool, so it won't drift toward that sharper condensation look.
I use it for light mode panels and form backgrounds where you want calm presence without flirting with near-white. It's a strong fit in healthcare interfaces and data-heavy product dashboards as a canvas for charts, tables, and secondary UI states. If your other surfaces are closer to Diamond White, this one stays more restrained, so the blue undertone won't take over.
One quirk: put it next to warmer whites and it will feel politely detached, not creamy. Pair it intentionally with cooler grays so hierarchy stays crisp.
Variations
Shades
Darker variations, created by mixing toward black.
Tints
Lighter variations, created by mixing toward white.
Tones
Muted variations, created by reducing saturation.
Hues
Hue rotations around the color wheel.
Temperatures
Warm and cool shifts of this color.
Color harmonies
Suggested palettes
Palettes built around this color.