Original Factory Colors
Classic Chevrolet Chevelle Paint Colors & Factory Codes (1970)
Every original factory paint color offered on the classic Chevrolet Chevelle (1970), with official manufacturer paint codes, hex approximations, and rarity notes. Use the paint code to order a color-matched sample from a restoration supplier.
★ Rare / Desirable Colors
★ Rare
Hugger Orange
65
#e8541f
1970
1970 special-order color; code listed by some sources as 65 (RPO 728) but trim-tag treatment varied — low production. Code not cross-confirmed for 1970; treat with caution.
★ Rare
Daytona Yellow
#f0c40f
1970
1970 special-order color; 2-digit trim-tag code not confirmed across sources; null. Low production.
Standard Colors
Classic White
10
#f2f1ec
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 10.
Cortez Silver
14
#b6babd
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 14 (metallic).
Shadow Gray
17
#7a7d80
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 17 (metallic).
Tuxedo Black
19
#0d0d0d
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 19.
Astro Blue
25
#2f5fa0
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 25.
Fathom Blue
28
#23406b
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 28 (metallic).
Misty Turquoise
34
#3f9a9a
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 34 (metallic).
Green Mist
45
#7a9a6a
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 45 (metallic).
Forest Green
48
#2f4a2f
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 48 (metallic).
Gobi Beige
50
#cbb88f
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 50.
Champagne Gold
55
#c4a85f
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 55 (metallic).
Autumn Gold
58
#cf9a3a
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 58.
Desert Sand
63
#c89a6a
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 63.
Cranberry Red
75
#8a1f2b
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 75.
Black Cherry
78
#4a1522
1970
1970 GM 2-digit code 78 (metallic).
About these colors:
Color names, factory paint codes, and production years are cross-referenced from established
marque references and owner registries. Hex codes are approximate digital representations of
factory paint — vintage automotive paint was never defined as a hex value, and original enamel
fades over time. True paint colors depend on age, sun exposure, refinishing history, and
production batch variation. For an accurate match, always mix by the factory paint code — not
by the on-screen swatch — and verify against an original paint chip or a professional
color-matched sample before purchasing paint for a restoration.