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20 Essential Pop Art Color Palettes for Digital Artists (with Hex Codes)

Picking colors is hard! I remember spending hours staring at the color wheel, trying to find shades that looked good together.

In Pop Art, color is everything. If your colors are too muddy or dull, you lose that exciting “pop” effect.

To save you some time, I have put together 20 of my favorite color palettes. I’ve even included the Hex codes so you can just copy and paste them right into your drawing app.

And they’re split by categories! Have fun, and let’s get colorful.

The Essential Starter Pack

1. The Lichtenstein (Primary Boom)

The Lichtenstein Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. A classic comic book look featuring primary bright red, yellow, deep blue, and black.

This is the classic comic book look.

It uses very pure primary colors because that is what old printers had available.

  • Bright Red: #E60023
  • Bright Yellow: #FFE900
  • Deep Blue: #002395
  • Black: #000000

2. The Warhol Neon

The Warhol Neon Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. A psychedelic combination of hot pink, electric cyan, lime green, and bright violet.

This palette feels like a party!

It uses colors that clash in a really fun way. It is perfect if you want your drawing to look psychedelic and bold.

  • Hot Pink: #FF1493
  • Electric Cyan: #00FFFF
  • Lime Green: #32CD32
  • Bright Violet: #8A2BE2

3. The Retro Diner (Muted Pop)

The Retro Diner Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. A muted 1950s aesthetic featuring teal, coral, cream, and cherry red.

Sometimes you want that vintage 1950s vibe without burning your eyes.

This palette reminds me of milkshakes and old cars. It is softer but still very colorful.

  • Teal: #008080
  • Coral: #FF7F50
  • Cream: #FFFDD0
  • Cherry Red: #D2042D

4. Spider-Verse Glitch

Spider-Verse Glitch Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. A modern digital look with electric blue, magenta, high-vis yellow, and dark purple.

This is for a more modern, edgy look.

It uses dark purples mixed with blindingly bright highlights. I love using this for sci-fi characters.

  • Electric Blue: #2C75FF
  • Magenta: #FF00BD
  • High-Vis Yellow: #FAFF00
  • Dark Purple: #1A0B2E

5. Bubblegum Punk

Bubblegum Punk Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. A playful mix of pastel pink, bright orange, and mint green.

This palette is cute but has a little bit of attitude.

It mixes sweet pastels with a bright orange kick.

  • Pastel Pink: #FFB6C1
  • Bright Orange: #FFA500
  • Mint Green: #98FF98

The “Soft Pop” Collection (Pastels & Kawaii)

Perfect for cute character designs or a modern “Lo-Fi” look.

6. The Ice Cream Parlor

Ice Cream Parlor Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Soft summer pastel shades of mint green, lavender, pale yellow, and cotton candy pink.

A very sweet, summery vibe. Think 1950s but softer.

  • Mint Green: #98FF98
  • Soft Lavender: #E6E6FA
  • Pale Yellow: #FFFACD
  • Cotton Candy Pink: #FFB7C5

7. Vaporwave Sunset

Vaporwave Sunset Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. A nostalgic 80s gradient style featuring cyan, hot pink, deep purple, and sunset orange.

Inspired by 80s nostalgia and digital aesthetics. Great for backgrounds.

  • Cyan: #00FFFF
  • Hot Pink: #FF69B4
  • Deep Purple: #800080
  • Sunset Orange: #FF4500

8. The “Kawaii” Gamer

The Kawaii Gamer Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Cute aesthetic colors including baby blue, sakura pink, white, and lilac.

Super cute, approachable, and very popular in modern illustration.

  • Baby Blue: #89CFF0
  • Sakura Pink: #FFB7C5
  • White: #FFFFFF
  • Lilac: #C8A2C8

9. Muted Mustard

Muted Mustard Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. A sophisticated indie style with mustard yellow, sage green, burnt orange, and off-white.

For a hipster, indie-comic look. It feels retro but sophisticated.

  • Mustard Yellow: #E1AD01
  • Sage Green: #9DC183
  • Burnt Orange: #CC5500
  • Off-White: #F5F5DC

Neon & Acid (High Energy)

Use these when you want your art to scream at the viewer!

10. The “Radioactive”

The Radioactive Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. High contrast villain colors featuring toxic green, deep violet, black, and white.

Green and Purple are the classic “villain” colors.

  • Toxic Green: #39FF14
  • Deep Violet: #9400D3
  • Black: #000000
  • White (for highlights): #FFFFFF

11. CMYK Glitch

CMYK Glitch Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Inspired by printer ink with process cyan, magenta, yellow, and deep black.

Mimics the colors of a printer running out of ink. Very technical and cool.

  • Process Cyan: #00B7EB
  • Process Magenta: #FF0090
  • Process Yellow: #FFD700
  • Key Black: #101010

12. The Heatmap

The Heatmap Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. intense warm colors featuring infrared red, blazing orange, sun yellow, and deep maroon.

Warm, energetic, and intense.

  • Infrared Red: #FF0000
  • Blazing Orange: #FF8C00
  • Sun Yellow: #FFFF00
  • Deep Maroon (Shadows): #800000

13. Miami Vice

Miami Vice Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Cool 80s aesthetic with turquoise, flamingo pink, white, and cool grey.

The ultimate 80s cool.

  • Turquoise: #40E0D0
  • Flamingo Pink: #FC8EAC
  • White: #FFFFFF
  • Cool Grey: #8C92AC

Dark & Edgy Pop

Pop art doesn’t always have to be happy. These are for moody, gritty designs.

14. Noir Comic

Noir Comic Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. A gritty detective style featuring true black, paper white, and blood red.

Think Sin City or detective stories. High contrast, low color.

  • True Black: #000000
  • Paper White: #FFFFFF
  • Blood Red: #8A0303

15. Midnight City

Midnight City Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Cyberpunk night vibes with midnight blue, neon blue, and neon pink.

Cyberpunk vibes. Dark backgrounds with neon lights.

  • Midnight Blue: #191970
  • Neon Blue: #4D4DFF
  • Neon Pink: #FF10F0

16. The “Zombie” Pop

The Zombie Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Spooky Halloween colors featuring bruise purple, sickly green, and greyish blue.

Grungy and unsettling, perfect for Halloween art.

  • Bruise Purple: #483D8B
  • Sickly Green: #ADFF2F
  • Greyish Blue: #778899

17. Blueprint

Blueprint Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Monochromatic architectural style with navy blue, royal blue, and blueprint white.

A monochromatic look (using only shades of one color). Very stylish.

  • Navy Blue: #000080
  • Royal Blue: #4169E1
  • Blueprint White: #F0F8FF

The “Art History” Remixes

Palettes inspired by famous artists other than Warhol/Lichtenstein.

18. The Keith Haring

The Keith Haring Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Bold street art style featuring fire engine red, grass green, black, and white.

Bold, primary, but with a lot of white space and thick lines.

  • Fire Engine Red: #CE1126
  • Grass Green: #009E60
  • Black: #000000
  • White: #FFFFFF

19. The Hockney Pool

The Hockney Pool Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Fresh summer vibes with pool blue, tile pink, and palm green.

Inspired by David Hockney’s swimming pool paintings. Fresh and clean.

  • Pool Blue: #00CCFF
  • Tile Pink: #FFCCCC
  • Palm Green: #228B22

20. The Mondrian

The Mondrian Pop Art color palette with Hex codes. Abstract geometric style with cadmium red, yellow, cobalt blue, and grid black.

Strict squares of color. The grandfather of modern graphic art.

  • Cadmium Red: #D01C1C
  • Cadmium Yellow: #F9D616
  • Cobalt Blue: #014BA0
  • Grid Black: #1D1D1D

Tips For Creating Your Own Pop Art Color Palettes

If you want to venture out and build your own palette from scratch, that is awesome! But be careful—it is easy to accidentally make things look “muddy” or “dull.”

Here are my top 3 rules to keep your Pop Art looking authentic:

1. Stay in the “Top Right” Corner

When you are picking colors in Procreate or Photoshop, look at your color square. You want to pick colors from the top-right corner. This is where the High Saturation and High Brightness live.

Avoid the middle! If a color looks “greyish” or “dusty,” it probably won’t work for Pop Art.

2. Opposites Attract (Complementary Colors)

Pop Art loves drama!

Great use of Complementary Colors by Akira Toryama from the manga Dragon Ball Z
Dragon Ball Z Manga by Akira Toryama

To get the most contrast, pair colors that are on opposite sides of the color wheel.

  • Red pops next to Green.
  • Blue pops next to Orange.
  • Yellow pops next to Purple.

This creates a “vibrating” effect that grabs the viewer’s attention immediately.

3. Limit Your Palette

It is tempting to use every color in the rainbow, but Pop Art works best with limits. Try to stick to just 3 or 4 colors plus Black and White. When you limit your choices, your design becomes bolder and easier to read!

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Do skin tones have to be realistic in Pop Art?

No way! In fact, Pop Art is famous for not being realistic.

Andy Warhol famously painted Marilyn Monroe with pink skin and blue eyeshadow. Don’t be afraid to paint your character’s skin lime green, bright violet, or even cyan.

It makes the piece feel artistic and modern rather than just a regular portrait.

2. Can I use gradients in Pop Art?

Traditionally, Pop Art uses “flat” solid colors. However, if you really want a gradient, try using a Halftone Pattern (dots) instead of a smooth airbrush fade. This keeps that retro texture while still letting you blend from one color to another.

If you must use a smooth gradient, keep it subtle and in the background!

3. Should my outlines always be black?

Classically, yes! Thick black outlines are the hallmark of the “Comic Book” Pop Art style.

However, in modern designs (like the “Bubblegum Punk” style), some artists use colored outlines – like using a dark purple outline on a pink character.

It softens the look a bit, but for beginners, I recommend sticking to black for that maximum “Pop” effect!

Go Make Something Bright!

I hope these palettes help you get started.

Don’t be afraid to experiment! Try using the “Warhol Neon” colors on a serious character and see how it changes the mood.

Color is one of the best tools we have as artists, so have fun with it!

And as always: Keep on drawing!

-Patricia

DonCorgi

Patricia Caldeira is the main writer here at Don Corgi. She's an art teacher with over 20.000 happy students across many platforms and courses!
Enjoy your stay and as always:
Keep on drawing!

Patricia’s courses have enrolled 22 000+ students around the world, in platforms such as Udemy, Skillshare, Gumroad and more.

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