Pearl Color Chart — Every Natural Pearl Color by Species (Interactive)

Natural pearl colors run from ink-black peacock to deep gold — and none of the colors below are dyed. Each pearl species grows its own palette, set by the oyster's nacre: Tahitian pearls (Pinctada margaritifera) own the dark spectrum, South Sea pearls (Pinctada maxima) the white-to-gold spectrum, and Akoya (Pinctada fucata) the cool white-rosé tones. Tap any color to see what causes it and how rare it is.

Tap a color above.

The colors on real pearls

Tahitian pearls 9-10mm in natural peacock color (Pinctada margaritifera)
Tahitian pearls 9-10mm in natural peacock color (Pinctada margaritifera) — from our catalog, see this piece
Golden South Sea pearl 12mm, natural deep gold color (Pinctada maxima)
Golden South Sea pearl 12mm, natural deep gold color (Pinctada maxima) — from our catalog, see this piece
White South Sea pearl pendant with diamonds, natural white-rosé color
White South Sea pearl pendant with diamonds, natural white-rosé color — from our catalog, see this piece

Why pearl color is never "just one color"

A fine pearl shows a body color (the dominant tone) plus an overtone — a translucent second color floating above it — and sometimes orient, a soft iridescence that shifts as the pearl moves. Peacock, the most prized Tahitian color, is exactly that stack: dark green body, rose-to-aubergine overtone. When you compare pearls, look at them on white paper in daylight; overtones are where most of the beauty (and value) hides.

Color also interacts with the wearer: cooler tones (silver, blue-grey, white-rosé) flatter cool skin undertones, while warm tones (gold, champagne, chocolate) sing on warm undertones. If you are choosing a gift and don't know the undertone, white with rosé overtone (Akoya or white South Sea) is the safest universally flattering choice.

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