Following one of the bleakest years in memory, Pantone has announced its 2021 color of the year. And it’s not one but two colors, designed to create the sensation of a fresh sunrise over rocky terrain. The colors are called Illuminating, a yellow that appears like the skin of a ripe lemon, and Ultimate Gray, which resembles wet cement.
Which is why in the past few years especially, Pantone’s picks have been imbued with social significance, serving as a snapshot of the global mood. Pantone’s 2020 selection was Classic Blue, a tame choice meant to counteract the existential anguish of autocratic leaders like Donald Trump and the mass propaganda behind them on platforms like Facebook. Pantone’s 2019 color was Living Coral, another color selected to provide reassurance in the face of rising authoritarianism.
Pantone actually selected one color first and had settled on it as the color of the year months ago: Illuminating. But as the year progressed, Illuminating alone felt wrong to the team.
“There was a day when [Eiseman] called me,” says Laurie Pressman, vice president of the Pantone Color Institute. “And she said, ‘You know, we’re giving this a rethink.'” So the team brought in the gray to form a two-color statement.
Alone, a gray would be stagnant and depressing, while a yellow would be overly ebullient. Together, Pantone argues, the pair is meant to be both optimistic and thoughtful.“[Illuminating] is definitely an aspirational color, no question,” says Eiseman. “But I think with the solidity of the gray . . . when you juxtapose those colors against each other, the concept is clear, ‘Here’s what we’re hoping for. And this is the solid grounding to get us there.'”
The symbolism of the color of the year shouldn’t overshadowthe business of color forecasting. Illuminating is a color on the rise, havingmade a small splashat London Fashion Week in October. A similar yellow has been percolating atOff-WhiteandLouis Vuittonunder designerVirgil Abloh. Fans of the upcoming mega gameCyberpunk 2077may notice that Illuminating is a stone’s throw from itsdefining electric-yellow cover art(which spawned a dozen promotional productsof its own).For the average Target or Home Depot shopper, the Pantone team sees Illuminating as a pragmatic choice. Gray has been a mainstay across the world of design for at least a decade now, and with a splash of yellow, you can update your wardrobe or your dwelling without the complete makeover that most of us cannot currently afford.
“We have to acknowledge that gray has been around forever . . . if you think of it from a practical standpoint, how can we take a gray people are really comfortable with [and update it],” says Pressman. “[We’re] living in gray sweats! We’re not of a mindset, ‘That’s so yesteryear, throw it away.’ We’d rather engage on how to make that gray more fun. . . . and yellow answers that.”
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