Burrito
#eed7c1
Toasty tan-cream warmth for grounded, paperlike UI blocks
About Burrito
Burrito is what happens when you push past cream into actual warmth. It's got more saturation than Almond or Buttercream, you can feel the clay and caramel underneath instead of just sensing it might be there. Where those two retreat into almost-neutral territory, this one commits. It's still light, still soft, but it's got backbone.
You'll use it in food and beverage packaging, restaurant interfaces, and hospitality design where you need warmth that reads as intentional rather than apologetic. It works in cosmetics and skincare where the brown undertone actually matters, it suggests something natural without trying to hide what it is. Unlike Acropolis or Buttercream, it doesn't flatten when you pair it with mid-tone elements; it actually anchors them. This is the one you reach for when the brief says "warm and approachable" and you don't want to second-guess yourself on contrast.
The trade: at smaller sizes on dim screens it can read slightly darker and less peachy than it actually is. Full-size mockups in real lighting will save you here.
Code snippets
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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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