Color Palettes with CMYK Formulas
While Peter Max posters and the psychedelic movement typifies the sixties color for most of us, there are also some tamer color combos to consider from the earlier part of that wild decade including soft pastels like baby blue and poodle pink.

C4M65Y100 | C80M10Y40 | M90Y50 | C30M100Y80K20 | C20M40Y85K5 | C45
Shades of pink with a burst of orange.

C23M20Y25 | M53 | C35M85 | C50Y90 | C60M100K10
Relive the sixties with these pretty pinky purples and yellowish green.

A rather tame mix of colors (compared to other color combos of the time).

C100M40 | M47Y100 | C10M95Y5
Shades of the sixties with blue, orange, and pink.

C70M5Y100 | M100Y100 | C53M100 | White
Throw a reddish orange in the middle of green and purple.

Y100 | M100 | C100 | C50Y100 | C70M70
Here's a psychedelic look for you: pure yellow, magenta, cyan, green, and purple.

M65Y25 | M30Y10 | C65M10 | M50Y45 | White | C40K100
From the softer side of the sixties, the early years of cool pinks, baby blue, and a dose of warm tangerine too.

Y100 | M100 | C30M100K13 | C100M100
No shrinking violets here along with pure yellow.

Black and white with pink and red.
Color Meanings and Mixing Colors
Discover the cultural meanings for these colors and more ways to mix and match colors.
More Color Palettes
Explore more color palettes to evoke a certain mood or make a color statement.
Use Swatch Books
Use PANTONE Color Guides to get just the right shades for your color palettes and to find CMYK-PMS color equivalents.

