Color
Chi colors are designed to comply with U.S. Section 508 federal requirements. Section 508 follows the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 2.0) Level AA standards which require text and background color contrast ratios of 4.5:1 or higher. All Chi colors either meet (AA) or exceed (AAA) these standards and have been marked below accordingly.
Brand
Primary Accent
#F95E4ASecondary Accent
#2AEDE5Supporting Colors
#FFFFFF#0C9ED9#FFF8B3#0F3133Neutral
#262425Used for primary text color on white and low-contrast backgrounds on black.
#343333Used for low-contrast borders on black and medium-contrast backgrounds on black.
#434142Used for medium-contrast borders on black and high-contrast backgrounds on black.
#585657Used for secondary text on white and high-contrast borders on black.
#6A6869Used for muted or disabled text and icons on white.
#949293Used for muted or disabled text and icons on black.
#B1B0B0Used for high-contrast borders on white.
#D6D3D4Used for medium-contrast borders on white.
#DFDDDEUsed for medium-contrast borders and high-contrast backgrounds on white.
#F2F0F1Used for low-contrast borders and medium-contrast backgrounds on white.
#F6F4F5Used for low-contrast backgrounds on white.
#FAFAFAUsed for low-contrast backgrounds on white.
Semantic
Use semantic colors to communicate meaning to users. Examples include displaying alerts, form field validation, user status, application state and more. Use green (success) for positive, blue (info) for informative, red (danger) for negative, and yellow (warning) for needs attention. Semantic colors should never be used for decorative purposes.
#007E44#009054#95E9C9#DBFAEE#0262B9#0080DC#AEDEFF#E0F3FF#D62C15#ED3E27#FFC5BD#FFE8E5#996100#C27B00#FDE162#FFF8B3Brand
Primary Accent
#0047BBSecondary Accent
#48D597Supporting Colors
#FFFFFF#02BCB2#F9F162#6FD16FNeutral
#242526Used for primary text color on white and low-contrast backgrounds on black.
#313336Used for low-contrast borders on black and medium-contrast backgrounds on black.
#3F4145Used for medium-contrast borders on black and high-contrast backgrounds on black.
#53565AUsed for secondary text on white and high-contrast borders on black.
#65686CUsed for muted or disabled text and icons on white.
#8E9399Used for muted or disabled text and icons on black.
#ACB0B5Used for high-contrast borders on white.
#D0D4D9Used for medium-contrast borders on white.
#DADEE2Used for medium-contrast borders and high-contrast backgrounds on white.
#EDF0F2Used for low-contrast borders and medium-contrast backgrounds on white.
#F4F5F6Used for low-contrast backgrounds on white.
#F8F9F9Used for low-contrast backgrounds on white.
Semantic
Use semantic colors to communicate meaning to users. Examples include displaying alerts, form field validation, user status, application state and more. Use green (success) for positive, blue (info) for informative, red (danger) for negative, and yellow (warning) for needs attention. Semantic colors should never be used for decorative purposes.
#008000#189E18#A7DBA7#CEF2CE#0060FA#468AF1#C0D7FA#E6F0FF#D81820#FA5056#FCC7C9#FCE8E9#946300#D19110#F6ED79#F9F5BEBrand
Primary Accent
#E0311ASecondary Accent
#E66400Supporting Colors
#FFFFFF#B2FFF6#FFF8B3#0F3133Neutral
#262425Used for primary text color on white and low-contrast backgrounds on black.
#343333Used for low-contrast borders on black and medium-contrast backgrounds on black.
#434142Used for medium-contrast borders on black and high-contrast backgrounds on black.
#585657Used for secondary text on white and high-contrast borders on black.
#6A6869Used for muted or disabled text and icons on white.
#949293Used for muted or disabled text and icons on black.
#B1B0B0Used for high-contrast borders on white.
#D6D3D4Used for medium-contrast borders on white.
#DFDDDEUsed for medium-contrast borders and high-contrast backgrounds on white.
#F2F0F1Used for low-contrast borders and medium-contrast backgrounds on white.
#F6F4F5Used for low-contrast backgrounds on white.
#FAFAFAUsed for low-contrast backgrounds on white.
Semantic
Use semantic colors to communicate meaning to users. Examples include displaying alerts, form field validation, user status, application state and more. Use green (success) for positive, blue (info) for informative, red (danger) for negative, and yellow (warning) for needs attention. Semantic colors should never be used for decorative purposes.
#007E44#009054#95E9C9#DBFAEE#0262B9#0080DC#AEDEFF#E0F3FF#D62C15#ED3E27#FFC5BD#FFE8E5#996100#C27B00#FDE162#FFF8B3