Tuscan Red is a deep, earthy red that feels like sunbaked bricks, aged wine, and weathered rooftops. It carries warmth and history, so it instantly suggests nostalgia, romance, and rustic elegance. In color psychology, Tuscan Red sits between passion and comfort: it is bold enough to catch the eye, but muted enough to feel grounded and trustworthy.
For creators, this makes Tuscan Red perfect for cinematic color grading, YouTube thumbnails, vlog intros, brand kits, and social banners. Used well, it can make your travel films feel timeless, your food videos feel cozy, and your storytelling edits feel intimate. Below are ready-made Tuscan Red color palettes with HEX codes, designed for video editors, designers, and Filmora users who want consistent, aesthetic visuals across every scene and asset.
In this article
Warm Rustic Tuscan Red Color Palettes
Sunset Vineyard Walls
- HEX Codes: #7c4032, #f2c9a0, #c97a40, #8c5a3c, #39221b
- Mood: Warm, nostalgic, and earthy like a late summer sunset over vineyard stone walls.
- Use for: Ideal for travel vlogs, winery promos, and cinematic B-roll highlighting rustic architecture.
Sunset Vineyard Walls mixes a rich Tuscan Red base (#7c4032) with terracotta oranges and soft sandstone neutrals. The darker brown (#39221b) anchors your frame, almost like old beams or soil, while the lighter peachy tone (#f2c9a0) keeps everything from feeling too heavy.
Use this palette when you want your footage to feel sunbaked and timeless: winery tours, hillside towns, cozy Airbnbs, or vineyard drone shots. It works beautifully for YouTube thumbnails, elegant lower-thirds, and vlog intros where you layer text over warm, rustic B-roll that feels cohesive from the first frame to the end screen.
Pro Tip: Build a Cinematic Tuscan Red Look in Filmora
To make this palette feel consistent across your entire edit, start by picking Tuscan Red and its supporting tones for your titles, transitions, and overlays inside Filmora. Use the deeper reds and browns for text and frames, and let the sandy beige act as a subtle background behind captions or subscribe buttons.
When you color grade your footage, nudge midtones slightly toward the Tuscan Red hue and keep highlights warm. This gives your travel sequences, B-roll cutaways, and social edits one unified look, so viewers immediately associate this warm Tuscan Red aesthetic with your channel or brand.
AI Color Palette
You can capture a still from your favorite shot that shows this Tuscan Red combination clearly and turn it into a reference card. Filmora's AI Color Palette feature lets you sample that look and apply it automatically to other clips in your timeline.
This is especially helpful for multi-location shoots where lighting changes constantly. AI Color Palette analyzes your reference frame and helps match contrast, warmth, and saturation, so rooftop sunsets, market streets, and indoor tastings all share the same Tuscan Red mood without manual tweaking on every clip.
HSL, Color Wheels & Curves
After matching your clips with AI, refine the Tuscan Red tones using Filmora's HSL, color wheels, and curves panels. Use HSL to selectively deepen red and orange hues without oversaturating skin tones. Then use the color wheels to warm midtones slightly while keeping shadows a little cooler for a cinematic look.
If highlights feel too bright or washed out, gently pull down the top of the RGB curve and add a subtle S-curve for contrast. You can also explore dedicated color correction tips in Filmora to keep your Tuscan Red palettes rich while preserving detail in both sky and stone textures.
1000+ Video Filters & 3D LUTs
If you want a fast way to stylize your Tuscan Red palette, start with Filmora's built-in presets. Many warm film, vintage, and cinematic LUTs already lean toward earthy reds and golden highlights, so a single click can get your vineyard or cityscape footage very close to the Sunset Vineyard Walls mood.
From there, you can layer subtle adjustments or stack filters to push the look more rustic, dreamy, or dramatic. Filmora's video filters and 3D LUTs make it easy to keep thumbnails, intros, and vertical reels all locked into the same Tuscan Red aesthetic without rebuilding the grade from scratch every time.
Terracotta Market Morning
- HEX Codes: #813a30, #e9b792, #f4e2c3, #c56a3c, #6b3b26
- Mood: Comforting and bustling, evoking open-air markets and fresh bread at dawn.
- Use for: Works well for foodie content, recipe shorts, and cozy cafe intro sequences.
Terracotta Market Morning wraps Tuscan Red (#813a30) in baked clay oranges and soft beiges. The creamy highlight tone (#f4e2c3) feels like early-morning light, while the deeper brown (#6b3b26) suggests coffee beans, bread crust, and wooden stalls.
Apply this palette to cooking channels, brunch vlogs, barista shots, and warm lifestyle edits. Use the lighter tones as backgrounds for ingredient callouts or recipe steps, and place Tuscan Red on key titles, subscribe buttons, and thumbnail borders so your food brand looks consistent on YouTube, Instagram, and shorts.
Old World Kitchen Glow
- HEX Codes: #7a332b, #f5d2a8, #e6a15b, #9b5e3b, #4a2920
- Mood: Inviting and homey, like candlelight on weathered wood and clay tiles.
- Use for: Great for homestead vlogs, interior walkthroughs, and heritage brand storytelling.
Old World Kitchen Glow combines a muted Tuscan Red (#7a332b) with golden amber and rich wood browns. It feels like cooking in a stone kitchen lit by candles, where every surface reflects a soft, warm shine.
This palette works well for slow-living channels, interior tours, bread-baking sequences, and brand stories that highlight craftsmanship. Use the golden hex (#e6a15b) for light flares or accent shapes in your lower-thirds, and let the darker brown (#4a2920) serve as a background for intros, outros, and logo reveals.
Harvest Courtyard Evening
- HEX Codes: #843c30, #f0c899, #d88b45, #73613e, #2f2520
- Mood: Celebratory and grounded, capturing lantern-lit dinners and harvest feasts.
- Use for: Use for event highlight reels, wedding receptions, and outdoor dinner party recaps.
Harvest Courtyard Evening pairs Tuscan Red (#843c30) with wheat golds and olive shadows. It has the feeling of late-summer gatherings: string lights, long tables, and glasses catching the last light.
Use this palette when editing outdoor events, especially receptions, parties, and family gatherings. The lighter beige (#f0c899) helps text stay readable over busy backgrounds, while the deep charcoal brown (#2f2520) is perfect for elegant title cards and end screens that still feel warm and celebratory.
Elegant Classic Tuscan Red Color Palettes
Chianti Velvet Elegance
- HEX Codes: #6e2f2b, #f5e6d6, #b09a88, #8a4c3a, #262020
- Mood: Refined and luxurious, like velvet upholstery and aged wine cellars.
- Use for: Perfect for brand films, fashion lookbooks, and high-end product promos.
Chianti Velvet Elegance is a smoother, more reserved take on Tuscan Red (#6e2f2b), supported by creams and taupes. The near-black accent (#262020) gives strong contrast that feels premium, not harsh.
This palette is ideal for fashion campaigns, jewelry showcases, luxury real estate tours, and any brand that wants a classic, wine-inspired identity. Use the soft cream (#f5e6d6) for clean backgrounds and overlays, while Tuscan Red and deep brown frame your product shots, packshots, thumbnails, and hero banners.
Gilded Tuscan Ballroom
- HEX Codes: #7c342d, #f7e1b5, #d3a75a, #947047, #3b2c24
- Mood: Regal and luminous, echoing chandeliers, gilded frames, and polished floors.
- Use for: Use for wedding films, gala recaps, and luxury real estate video tours.
Gilded Tuscan Ballroom puts Tuscan Red (#7c342d) next to soft champagne and brushed gold. The combination feels like a ballroom lit by chandeliers and candles, with reflections on polished wood and ornate frames.
Use this palette to grade ballroom weddings, black-tie events, corporate galas, or historic interiors. Let the pale gold (#f7e1b5) carry elegant typography for invitations, event highlight thumbnails, and chapter titles in your videos, while Tuscan Red frames logos and important text blocks.
Marble Arcade Shadows
- HEX Codes: #75352f, #f3efe8, #c0b4a3, #7b6c60, #252122
- Mood: Calm, sophisticated, and architectural with a museum-like stillness.
- Use for: Great for architectural walkthroughs, portfolio reels, and minimalist brand videos.
Marble Arcade Shadows balances a muted Tuscan Red (#75352f) with cool marble neutrals and soft gray-browns. It has the quiet elegance of a gallery or cloister, where light and shadow create clean lines.
This palette fits architectural reels, design portfolios, interior studies, and minimalist brand channels. Use the off-white (#f3efe8) as a neutral base for on-screen text, and reserve Tuscan Red for call-to-action buttons, logo marks, and key accent shapes in your motion graphics.
Library Leather and Lace
- HEX Codes: #6a2e2b, #e9dbc4, #c4a892, #8c6d5c, #1f1816
- Mood: Intimate, intellectual, and romantic, like a vintage study filled with books.
- Use for: Ideal for author promos, educational channels, and storytelling-heavy sequences.
Library Leather and Lace softens Tuscan Red (#6a2e2b) with creamy pages and leather browns. It feels like being surrounded by old books, warm lamps, and gentle shadows.
Use this palette for booktube channels, study-with-me vlogs, online courses, podcast videos, and narrative storytelling edits. The light cream (#e9dbc4) keeps text highly readable, while the deepest brown (#1f1816) gives you a cinematic background for quotes, titles, and chapter markers.
Moody Cinematic Tuscan Red Color Palettes
Noir Alley Ember
- HEX Codes: #5b2624, #f0d2b8, #a6674a, #403539, #100c0d
- Mood: Dark, dramatic, and mysterious with a flicker of warm light.
- Use for: Use for trailers, narrative shorts, and music videos that lean into drama and suspense.
Noir Alley Ember pushes Tuscan Red darker (#5b2624) and surrounds it with inky blacks (#100c0d) and muted skin tones. It feels like a single streetlamp glowing in a narrow alley or a dim jazz bar.
This palette is perfect for moody music videos, crime-inspired shorts, stylized trailers, and bold title sequences. Use the pale tone (#f0d2b8) for faces and highlights, then frame them with deep reds and blacks to create strong silhouettes in thumbnails and intro cards.
Storm Over Siena
- HEX Codes: #70332c, #d8b39b, #7a726f, #4a4e57, #17181c
- Mood: Brooding and atmospheric, like thunderheads rolling over an old city.
- Use for: Perfect for travel films with dramatic weather, reflective vlogs, and moody timelapses.
Storm Over Siena contrasts Tuscan Red (#70332c) with stormy grays and cool blues (#4a4e57, #17181c). The palette builds tension and depth, suggesting rain, stone, and heavy clouds over old rooftops.
Use this for introspective travel vlogs, time-lapse cityscapes, or documentary segments dealing with serious themes. The neutral beige (#d8b39b) keeps titles and captions legible, while the dark slate tones make lower-thirds and overlay shapes feel cinematic rather than playful.
Candlelit Confessional
- HEX Codes: #6e2b28, #f5cda0, #d18a5d, #705243, #211715
- Mood: Intimate and raw, like a whispered confession by candlelight.
- Use for: Great for interview setups, podcast videos, and narrative monologues.
Candlelit Confessional uses a rich Tuscan Red (#6e2b28) surrounded by amber glows and deep browns. It feels close and personal, like a face lit by a single warm lamp in a dark room.
This palette is ideal for talking-head interviews, confessionals, behind-the-scenes commentaries, and podcast-style video episodes. Use the warm highlight (#f5cda0) for subtle background gradients or light leaks, while the darkest shade (#211715) makes a strong yet inviting backdrop for text overlays, quotes, and chapter headings.
Shadowed Gallery Frames
- HEX Codes: #662c28, #e4d3c4, #b49a87, #54423b, #141011
- Mood: Quiet, curated, and artistic, like a dimly lit gallery hall.
- Use for: Use for portfolio reels, art documentaries, and brand films with an artisanal edge.
Shadowed Gallery Frames treats Tuscan Red (#662c28) like a focal artwork, set within soft gallery neutrals and deep frame-like browns. It feels curated and deliberate, with plenty of negative space.
This palette works for artist portfolios, product showcases, artisan brand films, and slow, observational documentaries. Let the light beige (#e4d3c4) be your canvas, and use Tuscan Red sparingly on borders, key phrases, and end-screen CTAs to draw the eye without overpowering your visuals.
Soft Romantic Tuscan Red Color Palettes
Blush Vineyard Vows
- HEX Codes: #7b3731, #f7ded3, #f1b7a4, #c1807a, #6a5049
- Mood: Tender and romantic, like a sunset wedding among the vines.
- Use for: Perfect for wedding highlight films, engagement reels, and save-the-date teasers.
Blush Vineyard Vows softens Tuscan Red (#7b3731) with peachy blushes and rose tones. The palette feels dreamy and love-filled, like golden hour wrapped in soft fabric.
Use this for weddings, elopements, engagement sessions, and romantic brand storytelling. The blush tones (#f7ded3, #f1b7a4) are ideal for lower-thirds, date captions, and animated text, while Tuscan Red accents rings, bouquets, and important words in your titles and thumbnails.
Rose Dust Courtyard
- HEX Codes: #74302d, #f4d9d2, #e2a7a0, #b27f75, #483533
- Mood: Gentle and nostalgic, like faded roses on warm stone steps.
- Use for: Use for lifestyle reels, scrapbook-inspired edits, and nostalgic family videos.
Rose Dust Courtyard leans into dusty pinks and muted browns around a Tuscan Red core (#74302d). It feels nostalgic, like old photographs left in the sun or dried flowers pressed in a book.
This palette works beautifully for family films, memory montages, lifestyle reels, and scrapbook-inspired edits. Use the pale pink (#f4d9d2) as a background for Polaroid-style frames, and Tuscan Red for handwritten-style fonts, underlines, and subtle borders in your design assets.
Morning Letterpress Ink
- HEX Codes: #6b2c2a, #f6e7da, #e6c1aa, #b08a7e, #3b2b28
- Mood: Calm and poetic, like handwritten notes on creamy paper.
- Use for: Great for journaling vlogs, poetry videos, and minimalist aesthetic reels.
Morning Letterpress Ink makes Tuscan Red (#6b2c2a) feel like soft ink stamped on warm paper. Creamy whites and desaturated neutrals create a quiet, contemplative atmosphere.
This palette is perfect for journaling vlogs, poetry readings, study aesthetics, and minimal text-led reels. Keep backgrounds light (#f6e7da) for maximum readability and use Tuscan Red for simple headlines, chapter cards, and subtle iconography so your visuals stay calm yet characterful.
Tips for Creating Tuscan Red Color Palettes
Tuscan Red is versatile, but it looks best when paired thoughtfully with neutrals, warm accents, and controlled contrast. Use these tips to build palettes that work in both video and static design.
- Pair Tuscan Red with warm neutrals (cream, beige, taupe) to keep the palette sophisticated and avoid a loud, overly saturated look.
- Add one grounding dark shade (charcoal, espresso brown, or deep plum) for titles, frames, and letterboxing to make text and logos stand out.
- For thumbnails and intros, always test readability: put white or very light text over midtone Tuscan Red, or use Tuscan Red text on pale backgrounds.
- Keep skin tones natural by adjusting red and orange hues gently; in Filmora, use HSL to reduce saturation slightly while keeping Tuscan Red accents rich.
- Use one accent metal (gold or bronze) in luxury or wedding projects to enhance Tuscan Red without overwhelming the scene.
- Match your footage: if your scene is already cool or stormy, blend Tuscan Red with grays and blues instead of fighting the natural light.
- Maintain brand consistency by reusing the same 3 to 5 hex codes across intros, lower-thirds, end screens, and social banners.
- Create a simple style guide: note down your primary Tuscan Red hex, background hex, highlight hex, and accent hex, then import them as custom colors inside Filmora.
Tuscan Red can make your visuals feel rustic, romantic, or cinematic, depending on how you combine it with neutrals, shadows, and highlights. Whether you are editing a vineyard wedding, a moody travel vlog, or a cozy cooking series, a clear palette with exact HEX codes keeps your thumbnails, intros, and footage looking unified.
Try dropping these Tuscan Red palettes into Filmora as you design titles, color grade your clips, and build templates you can reuse. With AI-powered color tools, HSL controls, and ready-made LUTs, it is easy to turn a single Tuscan Red hue into a recognizable visual identity for your channel or brand.
Experiment with a few palettes, save your favorites as presets, and refine them as your style evolves. The more consistently you use Tuscan Red across videos and platforms, the faster your audience will recognize your work at a glance.
Next: Crimson Color Palette

