Toon Tone

Kim Possible's Cargo Pants

Study Kim Possible's Cargo Pants color in Toon Tone: #9FA276, RGB 159, 162, 118, HSB 64°, 27%, 64%, and common wrong guesses.

Try this color #9FA276 Cargo Pants
Kim Possible Cargo Pants color reference for Toon Tone
Kim Possible #9FA276

Answer color

Kim Possible's classic mission outfit pairs a black crop top with olive cargo pants. This prompt is about those pants, the practical action-hero piece that grounds the whole design.

#9FA276
HEX
#9FA276
RGB
159, 162, 118
HSB
64°, 27%, 64%
Target part
Cargo Pants

The color, broken down

HEX

#9FA276

RGB

R
159
G
162
B
118

HSB

H
64°
S
27%
B
64%

HSL

64°, 19%, 55%

The green is supposed to be practical

Kim's pants are not a bright cartoon green. They sit closer to olive-khaki, with enough mud in the color to feel like cargo fabric rather than a costume stripe.

Because the black top is so clean and graphic, the pants can look lighter in memory. The actual target is calmer and more useful-looking.

How to avoid military green

Start in yellow-green, then lower saturation. A clean army green usually looks too saturated and too simple.

Brightness should stay low-to-middle. If the pants begin to pop like a logo color, pull them back toward khaki.

Nearby tones that look right and are wrong

For Kim Possible Cargo Pants, the nearby swatches show plausible misses around #9FA276. One swatch warms Cargo Pants; another cools it. The rest test saturation or brightness against #9FA276.

#99A377 Too warm

Hue lands warmer than the target.

#A39F77 Too cool

Hue lands cooler than the target.

#A2A395 Too dull

Saturation drops below the answer.

#BEC28D Too bright

Brightness climbs past the target.

#828561 Too dark

Brightness falls under the target.

Practice with this color

The saved answer for Kim Possible Cargo Pants is #9FA276, a yellow color with HSB 64°, 27%, 64%. Treat it like a flat outfit color: folds and outlines help with recognition, but they should not change the answer.

Keep the saturation restrained. A cleaner, louder guess can look like a different design. The brightness is balanced, so a miss usually shows up as a small lightness drift. Use those two checks before changing the whole hue. This round is about Cargo Pants, not the full Kim Possible (2002) palette. Keep shadows, outlines, and nearby costume colors out of the guess when you judge Cargo Pants. Those details can push memory away from #9FA276.

RGB 159, 162, 118 gives the channel mix. HSL 64°, 19%, 55% is a second lightness check when the preview looks close but still feels off. If the score is close but still low, check whether the guess stayed in the yellow family. Then compare brightness 64% and saturation 27% with what you remembered.

Use the related cards after you answer Kim Possible Cargo Pants: Dopey Outfit #B5B11F / Morty Smith T-Shirt #FFF86D. They are for comparing nearby colors after the run, not for memorizing #9FA276 before the guess. Keep Kim Possible, Cargo Pants, and #9FA276 together in memory instead of averaging the whole silhouette.

Compare it with Dopey Outfit #B5B11F / Morty Smith T-Shirt #FFF86D; the colors are near each other, but the character parts are different. A practical replay order is color family first, brightness near 64% second, and saturation last.

In a run, start from how Cargo Pants feels on Kim Possible before checking the exact HEX #9FA276. After scoring, compare your guess with RGB 159, 162, 118 and HSB 64°, 27%, 64%. That usually shows whether the miss came from hue, saturation, or brightness. Open the related cards after the round: Dopey Outfit #B5B11F / Morty Smith T-Shirt #FFF86D. They are useful for nearby comparisons, but they should not replace the first memory of Cargo Pants.