Why so many control rooms were seafoam green (2025)

bethmathews.substack.com

245 points by Amorymeltzer a day ago


jscheel - an hour ago

I got through this entire article before I realized it was written by someone I worked with back in my agency days. Beth is an awesome designer with a great eye. Nice to see her on the front page here. Now, to the content: I often wonder how much we have lost with our endless quest for minimalism. We can't even make buttons look like buttons anymore. Affordances have become anemic at times. Designers who think and care deeply about functional color theory and usable design should be cherished.

Rantenki - 23 minutes ago

While I am sure there are stylistic reasons for using that color, there is another common reason why you see blue-green colors in paint, especially in older industrial environments: zinc chromate/phosphate corrosion protective coatings. Zinc chromate primer is the color you see on the interior surfaces of some aircraft, to inhibit corrosion. Zinc phosphate is more of a gray in most cases, although varying paint chemistries result in a spectrum between those two, with seafoam nearly smack in the middle.

These are still available today, although the chromate version seems less popular for general use due to toxicity, especially (I assume) in the case of a fire.

I have painted quite a few bits of sheet metal with a sea-foam-ish blue-green/gray paint back in the day (30 years or so ago). I don't recall the manufacturer, but it was a zinc conversion coating in nearly exactly that seafoam color, which has probably stolen at least a few years of my life expectancy. The same company sold other paints in a sickly mustard yellow, and close to fire-engine red, all with slightly different chemistries, I assume for different base metals.

ortusdux - 2 hours ago

Reminds me of Go Away Green - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_Away_Green

jcalx - 2 hours ago

Reminds me of turquoise cockpits [0], another workspace where visual fatigue considerations are important.

[0] https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/16434/why-are-r...

ryandrake - an hour ago

It's so nice to see colors in any kind of government, industrial, or commercial building. The "everything must be gray/beige" fad has dominated institutional interior design for at least 30 years. Maybe it's just nostalgia, I remember the wall colors in banks, schools, doctor's offices, mcdonalds, and so on in the 1970s and they seemed so wonderful. All these things got a coat of white paint sometime in the 2000s and look the same as everywhere else now.

somat - an hour ago

I wonder if the designers of cold war soviet planes read the same color theory because their cockpits are always a very particular indescribable shade of green. There were also very specific colors for subsystems, yellow for fuel, purple for hydraulics etc. Much more than the contemporary US designs.

karlgkk - 31 minutes ago

> We once went on a tour to spot bald eagles in West Tennessee, and upon arrival, a woman with fluffy hair in the state park bathroom told us she had seen 113 bald eagles the day before. We ended up seeing (counts on one hand)…2.

As a semi professional eagle enjoyer, if the day before was trash day, then she might have been telling the truth. I’m not joking, they have bald eagle proofed dumpsters in Alaska.

They’re basically smart seagulls with talons.

Terr_ - 24 minutes ago

Seeing all those two-tone walls with green blow and cream above, I bet it isn't coincidental that those tones resemble plants under an overcast outdoor sky.

Either because of unconscious choice, or because some designer theorized that people would be biologically primed to prefer it.

dogscatstrees - an hour ago

This article is a gem, thank you. Now off to Sherwin-Williams to see what the equivalent color names are. I wonder if there are matching formula.

kleton - 44 minutes ago

Because chromium III oxide is a very light-fast pigment

bluedino - an hour ago

Have always been a fan of colors like that for my desktop background. Maybe because it's calming and I don't realize it?

I'm not sure if it started with the teal from Windows 95's default color (hex codes vary based on Google searches), or if it was a purple-ish color from a classic Mac from school.

To this day, my work Mac is teal and my personal is purple.

ProllyInfamous - an hour ago

    #81D8D0 club, represent!
Tiffany green is a Top10 /hn/topbar color for a reason.
cmoski - 36 minutes ago

Old school SCADA screens that I first saw had a similar green background.

anonu - an hour ago

Some of the old retired US aircraft carriers have their control rooms painted this color.

mlacks - an hour ago

On US submarines, every bulkhead and beam not in the bilge is painted seafoam green. We were told it was the most soothing/ anti-rage inducing color possible - necessary for long deployments in cramped quarters.

After a little over a decade of service, no other color infuriates me more

- 2 hours ago
[deleted]
carabiner - 35 minutes ago

Su-27 fighter cockpit is known for its turquoise paneling that supposedly is to promote calm.

pavel_lishin - an hour ago

> He painted his bedroom walls red vermillion to test if it would make him go mad.

And? Did it?

ChrisMarshallNY - an hour ago

That’s a fascinating story!

I’d never even heard of this guy.

- 2 hours ago
[deleted]
d--b - 2 hours ago

Ha, I am very proud that I made that discovery independently as well. In the Light vs Dark theme, I settled on a light greyish green that is somewhat close to the one described here. It really does reduce eye fatigue.

sayYayToLife - 13 minutes ago

[dead]

huflungdung - an hour ago

Half arsed article. Expected much more detail

cynicalsecurity - 28 minutes ago

TL;DR: because mid-20th-century designers believed soft green reduced eye strain and improved focus.

Basically the same nonsensical belief as in regard the dark mode nowadays.

I don't even believe it's true. Green is just an army colour, that's pretty much it. Army uses army colours. Mystery solved.