As car enthusiasts, many of us despair at the sea of monochrome cars that flood our modern streets. Against such a mediocre backdrop, color makes a car stand out. They help highlight the magic curves penned by the designers, and can reflect the owner’s taste and personality. To that end, I ask you: What car color would you put back into production?
For me, the answer comes from my roots. I grew up in the shadow of the Holden factory in South Australia. Whenever a new Commodore came out, it wasn’t long before I saw them on the streets, many of which were emblazoned in the latest hero color of the moment. The most memorable of all was a striking shade called Hothouse Green.


The color debuted in 2002 with the launch of the VY Holden Commodore. Bright, metallic, and with surprising depth, it was known internally by the paint code 870J. It was available on all the performance models, and looked stunning on the V8-powered SS and the bonkers Maloo ute.

As is typical for hero colors, it didn’t stick around forever. Future high-performance Commodores appeared in a range of other shades, but none that left quite the same impression, at least on my budding automotive mind. It also didn’t trickle down to the lower-end models, which were still primarily sold in a range of silvers, dull blues, and maroons. In any case, the color had enough cultural impact that it became a popular shade in the tuner and muscle scenes. I’ve seen earlier generation Commodores resprayed with shiny Hothouse Green paint jobs, as well as a particularly nice Honda Integra DC2. The striking metallic worked well for show cars that were trying to make a visual impact.
Regardless, Holden wasn’t the only company putting out great colors in the early 2000s. In particular, Ford had some shockingly good colors available back in that era, as well as via its subsidiary, Ford Performance Vehicles (FPV). The BA Falcon introduced a range of bold solid colors, often without metallic components, and the trend continued with the BF generation. Colors like Octane and Breeze were instantly eye-catching and were far more interesting than the dull fleet-like colors of generations past.


Ford’s boldness saw it diverge from the mainstream, but with great effect. The rich, saturated colors on its fleet of brawny muscle cars put the brand’s vehicles right back in the public eye, at a time when the Australian arm was eager to recover from the ugly, unappealing Falcons of the New Edge era. The color served a purpose, and many buyers were more than happy to pick up their new Falcon in a daring shade.
I’d love to see all these colors come back. I can see Ford’s solid colors working well on cars like the Mustang, and maybe even the Mach-E. Meanwhile, I think Holden’s Hothouse Green would look particularly sharp on something like a new Chevy Blazer. In any case, you’ve heard my opinion; now it’s time to share yours. What classic color would you bring back, and what car are you sticking it on?
Top graphic image: Holden
All the ones available on a 1966 Oldsmobile …
Ebony Black
Nocturne Mist Poly
Provincial White
Lucerne Mist Poly
Royal Mist Poly
Trumpet Gold Poly
Laurel Mist Poly
Forest Mist Poly
Ocean MIst Poly
Tropic Turquoise Poly
Autumn Bronze Poly
Burgundy Mist Poly
Target Red
Champagne Mist Poly
Sierra Mist Poly
Dubonnet
Almond Beige
Silver Mist Poly
Porcelain White
Frost Green Poly
Ebony Black
Nocturne Mist Poly
Provincial White
Lucerne Mist Poly
Royal Mist Poly
Trumpet Gold Poly
Laurel Mist Poly
Forest Mist Poly
Ocean MIst Poly
Tropic Turquoise Poly
Autumn Bronze Poly
Burgundy Mist Poly
Target Red
Champagne Mist Poly
Sierra Mist Poly
Dubonnet
Almond Beige
Silver Mist Poly
Porcelain White
Frost Green Poly
Now in days you are lucky to get a red or blue on some cars
1971 Datsun code 907….Racing Green.Always one of my favorites.Also the Silver Blue metallic that Jaguar used back in the 60’s.Just please don’t bring back that Teal that GM painted everything with back in the 90”s.
Just recently Honda offered a pretty cool dark purple color for the Civic, they ditched it for tan. TAN!
Rose Mist, a GM color from the early ’60s.
“I’d like 25 copies on goldenrod, 25 on canary, 25 on saffron and 25 on paella.”
There were a lot of cars in the ’70s that could best be described as “Werther’s Original”.
Harvest Gold. That’s one color I’m happy has disappeared from cars.
Porsche’s Amazon “Green.” Looks deep metallic blue in almost all lights, but does present green at times. They just brought it back to PTS, but ~$15k is too much for paint!
(fondly remembering that neighbor’s 1994 Turbo 3.6 in Amazon Green…. drool.)
Goldenrod Yellow and Plum Crazy
I think Plum Crazy is still around. Panther Pink is only out once in a while anymore though.
The sort of burnt orange was pretty good looking, have not seen that these days really.
Of note – there is one of these green UTEs from the pictures that rips around in the Oak Creek, WI area. Great color indeed!
Im curious how he got it here to register it. It’s go the G8 front end and it’s clearly V8 & manual. Not 25 years old but who knows, WIsconsin does not even bother to inspect so its probably a G8 on paper. Nice unit.
Ford Ultra Violet (GN paint code), that was very close to Plum Crazy. My 1995 Escort GT has this color as the “special decor group” color for the Escort GT that year. 816 were built. It was offered for 96MY on the other Escort/Tracer models.
Plum-goddamn-Crazy. Yes, I know they did it recently for a few years, but they took it away for “Hellrasin'”, which was just stupid. I think one Demon 170 was painted in it, but purple Mopars are just amazing.
Close second is a tie between Copperhead and Stryker Red. I mean, Copperhead would be a cool muted orange, and that deep red. Oof, Delmonico Red wishes it could be the amazing of a red.
Stryker Red is so intensive to paint that it basically only makes sense on a limited production expensive car….but it is the best color ever put on an automobile.
Eh, give it to the $100,000 products no one wants. Like a Charger Daytona Banshee or something like that.
Joking!
Statutory Grape-
there was a trend in the early 90’s where everyone had a Dark Green metallic paint jog. I loved the one on the Taurus of that timeframe. Not sure why it never hung on.
Porsche signal yellow, signal orange and conda green from the early 70’s.
Yes, colour.
Competition Orange is my favorite shade of my favorite color. I’d get it on almost anything
My ’06 Charger Daytona R/T was Go Mango. Loved it. Also International Omaha Orange or International Copper from the 1980 color charts.
I always liked VW’s Silk Blue metallic.
My aunt had a Pontiac back in the day that was a really nice plum color called Hawaiian Orchid.
More than color, I want to see an end to the solid paint trend in Depression Gray and other meh hues. I feel solid paint only works in black, white, and deeply saturated colors.
VW brilliant orange
Monza blue
Honestly, my 2 favorite factory paints are Ford’s Eruption Green Metallic and BMW’s San Marino Blue Metallic.
Both are still in production, but are only on certain vehicles and I’m pretty sure Eruption Green isn’t long for this world, which is why it’s on my list for this article 😉
all the cool colors, not just stupid black and gray shit
All of them! If you look at a picture of a parking lot or a highway from the past, the cars looked like a spilled bag of Skittles. Today, it mostly looks like grayscale with a pop of color here and there. Boooooring.
And a chicken and egg problem. If you don’t offer colors, people won’t buy them, but at the same time people today are gray and boring themselves and just want to be “safe”. And here we are in a grayscale automotive world.
Sassy Grass, Hemi Orange, Plum Crazy, Panther Pink – on a wider range of cars
Dark Claret Metallic
I have said it before and I will say it again. Cars only come in three colors:
1.Red
B. Black
III. Who cares?
I would have added British Racing Green if there was more agreement over what it actually is. (Peter Egan once did a column for Road & Track on this subject.)
Jade green. My mom rented an early-90s Pontiac Bonneville in that color for a road trip, and it was a handsome vehicle.
Also: Buick astro blue.