Toon Tone

Mickey Mouse's Shorts

Study Mickey Mouse's Shorts color in Toon Tone: #BF3332, RGB 191, 51, 50, HSB 0°, 74%, 75%, and common wrong guesses.

Try this color #BF3332 Shorts
Mickey Mouse Shorts color reference for Toon Tone
Mickey Mouse #BF3332

Answer color

Mickey Mouse from Steamboat Willie (1928) uses #BF3332 for Shorts in this Toon Tone prompt. RGB is 191, 51, 50; HSB is 0°, 74%, 75%; HSL is 0°, 59%, 47%.

#BF3332
HEX
#BF3332
RGB
191, 51, 50
HSB
0°, 74%, 75%
Target part
Shorts

The color, broken down

HEX

#BF3332

RGB

R
191
G
51
B
50

HSB

H
S
74%
B
75%

HSL

0°, 59%, 47%

Nearby tones that look right and are wrong

#BF4932 Too warm

Hue leans warmer than the stored answer.

#BF3249 Too cool

Hue leans cooler than the stored answer.

#BF5454 Too dull

Saturation drops below the answer.

#DE3A3A Too bright

Brightness climbs past the target.

#A12A2A Too dark

Brightness falls under the target.

How this color came to be

This is a red family color with HSB 0°, 74%, 75%. It has high saturation, so players often make it too muted; it also has a middle brightness, so small lightness changes matter.

The stored answer is useful because it turns a remembered animation color into measurable values. In play, you only need to match the visible target part, but this page exposes the underlying color model for study.

Read the values as player advice, not just technical trivia. HSB 0°, 74%, 75% tells you the order of decisions: land in the red family, decide how strong the color should feel, then set the lightness. RGB 191, 51, 50 is useful for exact reproduction, but HSB is usually better while you are actively guessing.

How to match it from memory

Start by naming the broad family: red. Move hue until the live recolor lands in that family, then decide whether the prompt looks too pale, too intense, too bright, or too shadowed.

For Mickey Mouse, the important cue is Shorts rather than the full character palette. Keeping the target narrow helps your memory choose one answer instead of averaging several colors from the design.

Before you move a slider, say the remembered color in a sentence: "Mickey Mouse Shorts is a red color that feels ..." Then fill in vivid, dusty, bright, dark, soft, or neutral. That sentence gives your first guess a direction and makes the result card easier to learn from.

Practice with this color

Use this Mickey Mouse page after a run, not during one. The useful loop is to guess first, read the reveal, then open the study page for a color that surprised you. That keeps Toon Tone a memory game while still giving you a concrete way to improve.

For a second pass, compare Mickey Mouse with related characters below. Colors in the same family can still have very different slider behavior: a loud yellow, a dusty yellow, and a nearly neutral gray-yellow are not interchangeable once scoring starts.