Greek Goddess
#ede9ef
Cool, faintly rosy gray for airy focus
About Greek Goddess
Greek Goddess sits lighter than everything around it, almost washed out compared to Bubble Bath's intentionality or Cloud Break's purple lean. It's the gray that's given up on being warm. You're looking at something genuinely cool and desaturated, the kind of pale that reads almost lavender-tinged when you're not paying attention, then snaps back to neutral the second you look away.
Use this in light interfaces where coolness doesn't feel clinical: design tools where you need breathing room, productivity dashboards, the backgrounds in medical or financial software where sterile actually works in your favor. It pairs well with deeper grays or confident blacks. Body text holds up fine. The difference from French Porcelain is real, French Porcelain is trying to disappear, Greek Goddess just happens to be barely there.
Unlike Bubble Bath, which works because it's doing something quietly, this one works because it's doing almost nothing. It won't warm a room. If you're reaching for color, you're reaching for the wrong shade.
Code snippets
Copy this color into your project.
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
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.
Community palettes
Published palettes that include this color.