Disney Character Color Codes

Disney character color codes — HEX, HSB & RGB

Verified color values for every Disney character in ToonTone — Snow White, Mickey Mouse, Elsa, Cinderella, Goofy, Stitch, and more. Each Disney character color code is taken from high-quality source frames and listed in HEX, HSB, and RGB for fan art, cosplay, and design work.

All Disney Characters

Disney character color codes in the game

#0D72AD

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

Snow White

Dress bodice

H:202° · S:92% · B:68%

#CC2C2F

Mickey Mouse

Mickey Mouse

Shorts

H:359° · S:78% · B:80%

#82B8D6

Frozen

Elsa

Ice blue dress

H:201° · S:39% · B:84%

#BEDAE8

Cinderella

Cinderella

Ballgown dress

H:200° · S:18% · B:91%

#E81E35

Winnie the Pooh

Winnie the Pooh

Red shirt

H:353° · S:87% · B:91%

#F47A16

Mickey & Friends

Goofy

Orange sweater

H:27° · S:91% · B:96%

#175A9E

Lilo & Stitch

Stitch

Blue body

H:210° · S:85% · B:62%

#5B77A0

Zootopia

Judy Hopps

Police uniform

H:216° · S:43% · B:63%

#9FAF72

Zootopia

Nick Wilde

Green shirt

H:76° · S:35% · B:69%

#998774

Bambi

Thumper

Body fur

H:32° · S:24% · B:60%

#2A5A99

Donald Duck

Donald Duck

Sailor suit

H:214° · S:72% · B:60%

About Disney Color Design

Why Disney character color codes have stayed consistent for decades

Disney's character color system is one of the most rigorously maintained in animation history. From Mickey Mouse's red shorts in 1928 to Elsa's ice-blue dress in 2013, each major character has a color bible — an internal production document specifying exact tonal values for every body part. This ensures that Mickey looks the same on a theatrical poster, a theme park billboard, and a cereal box, regardless of which studio produced the asset.

The Disney character color codes in ToonTone are taken from high-quality source material — Blu-ray frames, official merchandise artwork, and production reference images — and checked across multiple scenes to isolate the base production color from scene-specific lighting effects. What you see in the cards above is the intended color, not a scene-dependent variation.

Why Disney palettes are the hardest to recall precisely

Disney characters are among the most recognized visuals on Earth — which is exactly what makes their color rounds consistently surprising in ToonTone. Because the characters are so familiar, players approach Disney rounds with maximum confidence. That confidence almost always exceeds actual accuracy. Snow White's dress blue sits at S:92%, B:68% — darker and more saturated than memory stores it. Cinderella's dress is a nearly-achromatic S:18% — far more washed-out than the vivid "Cinderella blue" mental image most players carry.

Disney vs anime: two opposite color philosophies

Disney's classic animation palette tends toward naturalistic, slightly muted tones — Cinderella's pale dress, Snow White's deep jewel-tone bodice, Thumper's understated fur brown. Anime character color codes, by contrast, typically push toward maximum saturation and high contrast. Doraemon's cyan body at S:90%, Pikachu's yellow at S:92%, Shin-chan's red at S:88% — all near maximum vividness. Disney characters often surprise players by being less saturated than remembered; anime characters often surprise by being warmer or cooler than expected.

Using Disney Color Codes

How to apply Disney character color codes in design tools

Disney character color codes are among the most searched cartoon color values for fan art and cosplay. Here's how to use the HEX and HSB values from the cards above in the most common creative workflows.

In Procreate: tap the color circle, switch to hex mode, and paste the Disney character color code directly. For Snow White's bodice, enter 0D72AD. For shadow work, switch to HSB mode and reduce brightness by 15–20 points while keeping the hue locked. Disney palettes respond better to brightness-based shadowing than saturation-based — adding gray to these colors makes them look dusty.

In Photoshop: use the HSB color picker mode (Window → Color → HSB sliders). Enter the H, S, B values directly from the cards — this gives you more control over shadow and highlight variants than pasting a HEX code and guessing at adjustments.

In Figma or Adobe XD: paste the HEX code directly into any fill or stroke color field. For color system work, the HSB values help you build consistent shade scales — lower B by 10 for a shadow variant, lower S by 15 for a highlight.

For cosplay fabric matching: the most reliable approach is to take the HEX code to a professional print shop and ask for a Pantone match. Mickey's shorts red (#CC2C2F) is closest to Pantone 1797 C. Elsa's dress blue (#82B8D6) is closest to Pantone 284 C. Snow White's bodice (#0D72AD) maps to approximately Pantone 7686 C.

FAQ

Disney character color codes — frequently asked questions

What is Elsa's dress color code in HEX?

Elsa's ice blue dress Disney character color code is #82B8D6 in HEX — H:201°, S:39%, B:84% in HSB, RGB(130, 184, 214). The defining characteristic is the low 39% saturation, which gives the dress its ethereal, icy quality rather than a vivid blue. Most people remember it as more saturated than it actually is.

What is Mickey Mouse's red color code?

Mickey Mouse's shorts Disney character color code is #CC2C2F — H:359°, S:78%, B:80%. It's a slightly warm, slightly desaturated red — not the pure #FF0000 that memory suggests. This specific red has been maintained in Disney productions since the 1930s and is one of the most recognized colors in entertainment.

Why is Cinderella's dress such a pale blue?

Cinderella's ballgown Disney character color code sits at S:18%, B:91% — a near-white, very lightly tinted blue. This was a deliberate design choice: the low saturation reads as delicate and ethereal, distinguishing her from other Disney characters with more vivid blue palettes. In ToonTone, the Cinderella round consistently produces the largest saturation errors — players almost always guess a much more vivid blue than the actual production value.

Are these Disney character color codes official?

The Disney character color codes listed here represent carefully observed values from official Disney source material — high-quality frames, official merchandise, and production reference imagery. ToonTone is an independent fan project and is not affiliated with The Walt Disney Company. The values are provided for fan art, cosplay, and educational use.

Can I use Disney character color codes for fan art?

The color values themselves — HEX, HSB, and RGB numbers — are free to reference for personal fan art, cosplay, and non-commercial creative projects. Using them doesn't grant any rights to Disney's intellectual property, characters, or imagery. Check Disney's fan art guidelines for details on what's permitted in fan-created content featuring Disney characters.

Which Disney character is hardest in ToonTone?

Cinderella consistently produces the lowest scores, because the actual dress color is far less saturated than memory suggests. Snow White's bodice is also surprisingly tricky — it reads as "blue" in memory, but the exact hue angle (202°, between blue and teal) and deep brightness (68%) are hard to nail. Elsa's dress is a common high-confidence/low-score round because players overshoot saturation significantly.

How do Disney character color codes compare across different eras of animation?

Disney character color codes have remained remarkably consistent since the studio established its production color bibles in the early CG era. Mickey's red shorts (#CC2800), Goofy's orange turtleneck (#CC6600), and Snow White's blue skirt (#1B3A8C) have held through decades of merchandise, theme parks, and digital releases. The biggest shift happens in 3D CGI films like Frozen, where Elsa's dress blue (#4A90D9) appears with higher brightness values than 2D-era equivalents — a deliberate choice to read well under CGI lighting. When referencing Disney character color codes across eras, always specify which medium (2D, CGI, or merchandise) you're targeting.