Answer color
Lois Griffin's familiar Family Guy look pairs orange-red hair with a blue-green shirt and tan pants. This page focuses on the shirt color, not the hair contrast that makes it pop.
#22E3B9
- HEX
- #22E3B9
- RGB
- 34, 227, 185
- HSB
- 167°, 85%, 89%
- Target part
- Shirt
The color, broken down
A blue shirt with a green pull
Lois's shirt often gets remembered as blue because it sits under warm hair. In the actual series look, the color has a clear green side.
The pilot-era design used different colors, but the main-series memory is the teal shirt. That makes hue placement more important than brightness.
How to land on Lois's teal
Start between blue and green, then decide whether the preview still feels like fabric. Too much brightness makes it look like a clean UI cyan.
If the shirt reads blue at a glance, nudge hue toward green. If it reads mint, lower brightness and saturation.
Nearby tones that look right and are wrong
For Lois Griffin Shirt, the nearby swatches show plausible misses around #22E3B9. One swatch warms Shirt; another cools it. The rest test saturation or brightness against #22E3B9.
#22E3D9
Too warm
Hue lands warmer than the target.
#22E399
Too cool
Hue lands cooler than the target.
#4BE3C2
Too dull
Saturation drops below the answer.
#26FFD0
Too bright
Brightness climbs past the target.
#1DC4A0
Too dark
Brightness falls under the target.
Practice with this color
The saved answer for Lois Griffin Shirt is #22E3B9, a cyan color with HSB 167°, 85%, 89%. Treat it like a flat outfit color: folds and outlines help with recognition, but they should not change the answer.
Keep the saturation confident; lowering it too far makes this color wash out quickly. The target is bright, but a slightly darker guess can turn muddy fast. Use those two checks before changing the whole hue. This round is about Shirt, not the full Family Guy (1999) palette. Keep shadows, outlines, and nearby costume colors out of the guess when you judge Shirt. Those details can push memory away from #22E3B9.
RGB 34, 227, 185 gives the channel mix. HSL 167°, 78%, 51% 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 cyan family. Then compare brightness 89% and saturation 85% with what you remembered.
Use the related cards after you answer Lois Griffin Shirt: Rick Sanchez Hair and Shirt #9FE6E8 / Ord Body Skin #369FA5. They are for comparing nearby colors after the run, not for memorizing #22E3B9 before the guess. Keep Lois Griffin, Shirt, and #22E3B9 together in memory instead of averaging the whole silhouette.
Compare it with Rick Sanchez Hair and Shirt #9FE6E8 / Ord Body Skin #369FA5; the colors are near each other, but the character parts are different. A practical replay order is color family first, brightness near 89% second, and saturation last.
In a run, start from how Shirt feels on Lois Griffin before checking the exact HEX #22E3B9. After scoring, compare your guess with RGB 34, 227, 185 and HSB 167°, 85%, 89%. That usually shows whether the miss came from hue, saturation, or brightness. Open the related cards after the round: Rick Sanchez Hair and Shirt #9FE6E8 / Ord Body Skin #369FA5. They are useful for nearby comparisons, but they should not replace the first memory of Shirt.
Related characters
For Lois Griffin, use Rick Sanchez Hair and Shirt #9FE6E8 / Ord Body Skin #369FA5 as quick comparisons after the run. The main target is still Shirt and #22E3B9.
Next steps