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Top 15 Old Brass Color Palettes for Creative Projects With HEX Codes

Max Wales
Max Wales Originally published Mar 19, 26, updated Mar 20, 26

Old Brass sits between gold and earthy brown, carrying the warmth of metal that has a story. It feels grounded, confident, and nostalgic all at once, which is why so many creators use it to signal heritage, craftsmanship, and cinematic warmth. In video content, Old Brass instantly suggests a premium, lived in look that works beautifully for title cards, intros, overlays, and subtle UI details.

For branding, thumbnails, and motion graphics, Old Brass gives you an easy way to add warmth without going overly orange. It pairs well with creams, charcoals, forest greens, and even neon accents. Below are ready made Old Brass color palettes with HEX codes so creators and Filmora users can quickly build consistent looks for vlogs, cinematic edits, social posts, and complete channel branding systems.

In this article
    1. Antique Studio Glow
    2. Retro Lens Patina
    3. Heritage Edit Warmth
    4. Dusty Workshop Glow
    5. Sepia Market Streets
    1. Minimal Loft Brass
    2. Midnight Brass Title Card
    3. Editorial Brass Monochrome
    4. Gallery Frame Brass
    5. Cinematic Brand Intro
    1. Harvest Field Dusk
    2. Forest Trail Hardware
    3. Desert Caravan Light
    4. Urban Coffee Brass
    1. Neon Sign Contrast
    2. Soft Creator Desk

Warm Vintage Old Brass Color Palettes

Antique Studio Glow

antique studio glow old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b08a3c, #5c4b3b, #f2e2c4, #8f6b4a, #3a3027
  • Mood: Warm, nostalgic, and cinematic with a subtle patina.
  • Use for: Ideal for retro vlog intros, documentary titles, and nostalgic product stories.

Antique Studio Glow wraps Old Brass in coffee browns and creamy highlights, giving your visuals the feel of a softly lit studio full of vintage lenses and analog gear. The brass tone (#b08a3c) takes center stage, while the darker browns and deep shadows add depth and contrast, making text and logos feel rich but not loud.

Use this palette for story driven edits, heritage inspired branding, and any video where you want to suggest memory and craftsmanship. It works beautifully for title cards, chapter screens, and lower thirds in Filmora, and you can reuse the same HEX codes in your thumbnails, overlays, and channel banners to make the whole brand feel cohesive.

Pro Tip: Build a Cinematic Old Brass Look in Filmora

To keep Antique Studio Glow consistent across your project, start by setting Old Brass as your main accent color in Filmora. Use it for key elements like title bars, logo reveals, icons, and callout text backgrounds. Then let the deeper browns handle your shadows and frames so the brass tone feels like it is glowing from within the scene.

When editing vlogs or documentaries, you can design one master title and lower third in these HEX values, then save them as custom presets. This way, every intro, B roll caption, and end screen carries the same Old Brass identity without having to rebuild the graphics for each video.

AI Color Palette

If you have a reference still or a brand board using Antique Studio Glow, you can match that look across your whole timeline with Filmora. Filmora's AI Color Palette feature lets you sample the brass, coffee, and cream tones from one clip and automatically apply that mood to other shots, even if they were filmed in very different lighting.

Simply choose your best graded frame as the source, then use AI Color Palette to synchronize all your A roll, B roll, and cutaways. This helps you avoid jarring color shifts and keeps the Old Brass aesthetic locked in from intro to outro.

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HSL, Color Wheels & Curves

To really dial in this Old Brass mood, use Filmora's HSL, color wheels, and curves controls. You can slightly desaturate yellows and oranges to get that aged metal feel, then warm up midtones so skin tones still look natural against the brass UI elements. If you want a more cinematic finish, gently lift the blacks with curves to add a soft fade that matches the vintage palette.

Tools like Filmora's advanced color correction and grading, demonstrated in the official tutorials, make it easier to push brass highlights without blowing out your whites. Use color wheels to push shadows toward rich brown while keeping highlights closer to the soft cream in this palette so your text remains clear and legible.

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1000+ Video Filters & 3D LUTs

Once your core Old Brass colors are set, you can quickly give your footage a cohesive finish with Filmora's filters and LUTs. Filmora's video filters and 3D LUTs make it easy to add warmth, grain, and subtle vintage fades that support the Antique Studio Glow palette without overwhelming it.

Try combining soft cinematic LUTs with a bit of film grain or vignette to echo the moody browns and creams in this scheme. Save your favorite filter stack as a preset, then drop it onto every clip in your vlog, B roll montage, or product story to keep that Old Brass style consistent across your entire channel.

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Retro Lens Patina

retro lens patina old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #ad8434, #735b3e, #f6f0e2, #c09b6a, #25201b
  • Mood: Retro, textured, and softly desaturated.
  • Use for: Perfect for title cards, lower thirds, and overlays in retro travel or lifestyle videos.

Retro Lens Patina leans into muted brass and warm neutrals, giving your project the vibe of old camera leather and faded prints. The slight desaturation keeps things calm and grown up, while the darker accent (#25201b) helps headlines and logotypes stay readable on lighter backgrounds.

Use this palette to frame retro travel reels, lifestyle vlogs, or any content that mixes present day footage with nostalgic storytelling. In Filmora, apply the lighter neutrals to backgrounds and shapes, then drop Old Brass and deep brown onto text, badges, and overlay elements for polished thumbnails and end screens.

Heritage Edit Warmth

heritage edit warmth old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b59343, #7b5a2b, #f8e7c0, #d9b470, #423126
  • Mood: Earnest, historic, and warmly cinematic.
  • Use for: Use in brand documentaries, behind the scenes reels, and maker profiles for a crafted look.

Heritage Edit Warmth doubles down on the storytelling side of Old Brass. The main brass tone is balanced by toasted browns and a creamy highlight, which together mimic the look of aged paper, wooden workbenches, and archival photos. It feels trustworthy and rooted, perfect for brands that want to emphasize expertise and history.

Try this palette in Filmora for maker profiles, studio tours, and product stories. Use the cream shade as your overall background, reserve the darkest brown for text, and bring in Old Brass to highlight key phrases, timeline markers, or subscribe buttons so the viewer knows exactly where to look.

Dusty Workshop Glow

dusty workshop glow old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #a57d33, #514131, #f0debc, #c6a670, #2b2520
  • Mood: Industrial, worn in, and quietly dramatic.
  • Use for: Great for maker studio b roll, DIY tutorials, and craft process videos.

Dusty Workshop Glow pairs Old Brass with dusty woods and deep workshop shadows. The result is an industrial but human palette that works perfectly with textures like metal, leather, and unfinished timber. It suggests focus and craft without feeling cold or overly technical.

In your edits, use the lighter neutral as a soft canvas for on screen tips, while the darker tones anchor your titles, step numbers, and timeline breaks. Old Brass can highlight the tools, chapter labels, and subscribe CTAs in your thumbnails so viewers instantly recognize the hands on, practical vibe of your channel.

Sepia Market Streets

sepia market streets old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b18b3e, #6a5238, #f5e5cf, #c9a26f, #362a22
  • Mood: Romantic, travel inspired, and softly cinematic.
  • Use for: Use in street photography reels, travel vlogs, and cinematic B roll sequences.

Sepia Market Streets turns Old Brass into a sepia tinted story tool. The palette resembles warm streetlights reflecting on stone and brick, with enough contrast for subtitles and captions over busy city footage. It instantly pushes urban scenes toward a timeless, filmic look.

Apply this scheme to your travel vlogs, street photography reels, and cinematic B roll openers. In Filmora, keep the lighter sepia as your lower third background and let the darker browns carry your typography. The Old Brass highlight is ideal for map pins, timestamps, and chapter markers across your video series and channel art.

Modern Luxe Old Brass Color Palettes

Minimal Loft Brass

minimal loft brass old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b79645, #f5f5f3, #1f1f1f, #d0c7b5, #78726a
  • Mood: Minimal, upscale, and editorial.
  • Use for: Perfect for tech product promos, logo reveals, and minimalist channel branding.

Minimal Loft Brass cuts Old Brass with crisp black, white, and soft greige to create a refined, editorial feel. The palette feels like a modern studio loft: clean lines, neutral walls, and a few warm metallic accents that signal quality.

Use it for tech product showcases, logo stings, and minimal channel intros in Filmora. Set your background to off white or greige, apply black to main text, and save Old Brass for logo marks, icons, and accent lines. This combination keeps your thumbnails tidy and premium while hinting at warmth and personality.

Midnight Brass Title Card

midnight brass title card old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #a98434, #050608, #232735, #f4f1ea, #7b6d5b
  • Mood: Moody, dramatic, and cinematic.
  • Use for: Best for title sequences, trailers, and dramatic talking head setups.

Midnight Brass Title Card surrounds Old Brass with deep midnight blues and near black, making the metal tones glow with drama. The light neutral (#f4f1ea) is there to keep text and logo lockups legible without breaking the cinematic mood.

Choose this palette for trailers, series intros, or commentary videos with a serious tone. In Filmora, use the darkest shade as the main background, bring in Old Brass for text or stroke outlines, and layer subtle gradients to add depth. It also works brilliantly on YouTube thumbnails where you want a spotlight effect around your subject.

Editorial Brass Monochrome

editorial brass monochrome old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b08b3f, #e8ddc8, #5b5244, #f9f6ef, #2e2923
  • Mood: Refined, calm, and design forward.
  • Use for: Use in fashion lookbooks, portfolio reels, and minimalist UI overlays.

Editorial Brass Monochrome lives in a narrow band of brass, cream, and charcoal tones. This near monochrome approach feels calm and curated, perfect for content where design and photography should take center stage.

Use the soft creams for negative space, charcoals for typography, and Old Brass as a subtle accent on buttons, scroll prompts, and progress bars. In Filmora, this palette is especially effective for lookbooks, showreels, and UI overlays built on top of your footage, keeping the visuals elegant and uncluttered.

Gallery Frame Brass

gallery frame brass old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #af8c3d, #f4efe7, #333132, #cab89d, #7e6b55
  • Mood: Artful, curated, and understated.
  • Use for: Ideal for photo slideshows, art reels, and gallery style portfolio videos.

Gallery Frame Brass mimics the look of an art gallery: off white walls, darker display frames, and warm metallic details. Old Brass plays the role of the frame metal, sitting alongside soft neutrals that let your images or clips shine.

In Filmora, you can rebuild this look by using cream as the main background, charcoal for captions, and Old Brass for borders and dividers. It works especially well for photographers and artists presenting portfolios, as it quietly signals taste without pulling focus away from the work itself.

Cinematic Brand Intro

cinematic brand intro old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b38f40, #121418, #2c3440, #f1e9d5, #8c7965
  • Mood: Sleek, cinematic, and brand ready.
  • Use for: Made for logo stings, brand intros, and motion graphics packs.

Cinematic Brand Intro sets Old Brass against charcoal blues and soft ivory, creating a trailer grade mood with clear brand accents. The palette feels modern and cinematic, perfect for channels that want viewers to remember their logo and visual identity.

Use the darker blues as your base for motion backgrounds in Filmora, then drop Old Brass onto logo marks, animated lines, and key typography. The ivory tone keeps your text highly readable, while mid neutrals help you design lower thirds and info cards that fit seamlessly into the rest of your intro package.

Earthy Outdoor Old Brass Color Palettes

Harvest Field Dusk

harvest field dusk old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b59142, #705433, #f7e4bf, #8b9154, #2f2a22
  • Mood: Earthy, calm, and end of day cinematic.
  • Use for: Great for countryside vlogs, autumn lookbooks, and lifestyle B roll.

Harvest Field Dusk feels like golden hour in late autumn: brass sun, wheat fields, soft shadows, and muted greens. It brings a grounded calmness that fits perfectly with slow living content and countryside visuals.

In practice, use the light wheat color as your backdrop for text and overlays in Filmora, tap Old Brass for accents and section titles, and keep the darker brown and olive tones for borders, icons, and subtle gradients. This palette suits YouTube covers, Reels titles, and Pinterest pins that promote outdoor or lifestyle content.

Forest Trail Hardware

forest trail hardware old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #a88336, #38412f, #e4ddc7, #6f7b50, #1e2320
  • Mood: Rugged, natural, and quietly adventurous.
  • Use for: Use in hiking vlogs, camping gear promos, and outdoor tutorials.

Forest Trail Hardware blends brass hardware tones with forest greens and earthy neutrals. It suggests durable gear, mossy paths, and adventure that respects nature rather than overpowering it.

Use this palette for hiking vlogs, camping guides, and gear reviews. In Filmora, pair the light neutral with clean typography, let the greens color your accents and shape backgrounds, and reserve Old Brass for UI highlights like subscribe badges, gear spec callouts, and map overlays on thumbnails.

Desert Caravan Light

desert caravan light old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #bb9445, #8d6641, #f6e0b7, #d9b887, #5f4b3a
  • Mood: Sun baked, exploratory, and wanderlust driven.
  • Use for: Perfect for travel montages, desert reels, and slow cinematic B roll.

Desert Caravan Light turns Old Brass into a sun baked highlight amid hot sands and warm earth tones. The palette feels exploratory and cinematic, ideal for travel content set in deserts, canyons, or sun drenched streets.

Use the lighter sand color for text backdrops and story cards in Filmora, then weave Old Brass through your titles, transitions, and animated lines. The deeper browns can frame your subject in thumbnails and give subtitles enough contrast over bright, dusty footage.

Urban Coffee Brass

urban coffee brass old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b28e44, #3c2b23, #f2e2cf, #8a5a3c, #221916
  • Mood: Cozy, urban, and lifestyle focused.
  • Use for: Use in cafe vlogs, productivity content, and bookish aesthetic edits.

Urban Coffee Brass channels the glow of brass fixtures, espresso shots, and warm foam in a cozy city cafe. The palette mixes creamy lights with deep coffee browns and a steady Old Brass accent, giving your content an inviting, focused feel.

For cafe vlogs, study sessions, and productivity channels, use cream as your base for timers, checklists, and overlays. Let dark coffee hues support text, and drop Old Brass into buttons, progress bars, and icons. In Filmora thumbnails, this combination instantly communicates comfort and slow focus.

Creative Accent Old Brass Color Palettes

Neon Sign Contrast

neon sign contrast old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b48f42, #101015, #17c3e5, #f7f5f0, #ff3360
  • Mood: Bold, energetic, and eye catching.
  • Use for: Great for YouTube thumbnails, announcement posts, and short form hooks.

Neon Sign Contrast throws Old Brass into a high energy mix of electric teal, neon pink, and inky black. The brass shade acts as a grounding, slightly vintage touch that keeps the palette from feeling purely neon and helps it work across more mature brands.

Use this set sparingly for maximum impact: reserve teal and pink for callout shapes, arrows, and highlight words; keep Old Brass for frames, icons, and logo strokes. In Filmora, this palette is perfect for big announcements, product drops, and short form hooks where you need thumbnails and Reels covers that people cannot scroll past.

Soft Creator Desk

soft creator desk old brass color palette with hex codes
  • HEX Codes: #b29347, #f7f2ea, #f4b9a5, #7d756f, #4a3e37
  • Mood: Soft, creative, and workspace inspired.
  • Use for: Ideal for desk setup tours, creator tips, and aesthetic vlogs.

Soft Creator Desk places Old Brass tech accents alongside blush notes and gentle neutrals for an inviting, aesthetic workspace vibe. It feels modern and cozy, ideal for content about desk setups, productivity workflows, and creative tips.

Use the light neutral as your base, blush for supportive shapes and highlights, and Old Brass for key icons, bullet points, and buttons. In Filmora, you can build a whole graphic system around this palette for intros, lower thirds, and social repurposing, giving your channel a soft but professional identity.

Tips for Creating Old Brass Color Palettes

Old Brass is flexible enough to feel vintage, modern, or bold depending on what you pair it with. A few simple guidelines will help you combine it with other colors for clear, consistent video and design work.

  • Balance warmth with neutrals: pair Old Brass with creams, greys, or charcoals so the metal tone stands out without overwhelming your footage.
  • Protect readability: when using Old Brass for text, place it over dark backgrounds; for light backgrounds, use dark text and keep brass as an accent.
  • Limit strong accents: if you add bright colors (like teal or pink), keep them for small elements such as buttons, arrows, and underlines.
  • Match to your footage: if your video is cool or blue, warm it slightly with color grading so Old Brass UI elements do not clash with the scenes.
  • Keep a consistent ratio: in most layouts, use about 60 percent neutral base, 30 percent supporting tones, and 10 percent Old Brass accent.
  • Unify across platforms: reuse the same HEX codes for in video graphics, thumbnails, banners, and social templates to make your brand recognizable.
  • Test on mobile: always check how your brass palette looks on small screens to ensure contrast is strong enough for quick scrolling.
  • Create presets in Filmora: once you like a combination, save titles, color grading, and overlay styles as presets so every new project starts on brand.

Old Brass color palettes are a powerful way to give your videos and designs a distinct personality. Whether you lean into warm vintage storytelling, sleek modern luxury, earthy outdoor scenes, or bold neon contrasts, thoughtful Old Brass combinations can signal quality, warmth, and consistency at a glance.

Experiment with these 15 palettes in Filmora by applying the HEX codes to your titles, overlays, and brand elements, then refine the look with color grading and filters. Over time, viewers will begin to associate your unique Old Brass tones with your channel, making your content feel more cinematic and more memorable.

Save your favorite combinations as Filmora presets, reuse them across intros, B roll, and social snippets, and you will quickly build a cohesive visual identity that stands out in any feed.

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Next: Faded Teal Color Palette

Max Wales
Max Wales Mar 20, 26
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