Picture this: You spend an hour finding the exact teal that matches your client's brand. You send the design file to development. The button that launches shows up looking like someone mixed toothpaste with printer ink. What happened?
Nine times out of ten, the problem isn't the developer or the design—it's that nobody translated the color properly between systems. Your design tool speaks one language, CSS speaks another, and somewhere in that handoff, became with a typo that nobody caught.
This guide fixes that problem. You'll learn how screens actually create colors, why five different notation systems exist for the same shade of red, and which format to use when you're coding a hover state versus documenting brand guidelines.
Think of color codes as GPS coordinates for colors. Just like latitude and longitude pinpoint a location, digital notation systems give you exact addresses for every possible color a screen can display.
Here's the fundamental difference from print: Magazines use ink. Four colors (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) mix on paper to create what you see. Your monitor uses light instead—red, green, and blue LEDs shining at different brightnesses, combining to trick your eyes into seeing millions of distinct colors.
Back in 1996, web designers were stuck with 216 colors. That's it. Monitors could only handle 256 colors total, and different operating systems reserved 40 of those for sy...