Original Factory Colors

Classic Ford Model T Paint Colors & Factory Codes (1926)

Every original factory paint color offered on the classic Ford Model T (1926), with official manufacturer paint codes, hex approximations, and rarity notes. Use the paint code to order a color-matched sample from a restoration supplier.

Channel Green
#2f3d2b
1926
One of the early-1926 enamel colors that signaled the return of factory color after the black-only era, offered alongside black and Windsor Maroon.
Windsor Maroon
#4a1d22
1926
An early-1926 enamel color offered with the return of color, before Ford shifted later-1926 production to faster Pyroxylin (nitrocellulose) lacquer colors.
Highland Green
#26392c
1926–1927
A later-1926 / 1927 Pyroxylin color. Highland Green was among the three colors offered on closed (sedan/coupe) cars for the 1927 models.
Royal Maroon
#3f161c
1926–1927
A later-1926 / 1927 Pyroxylin color, one of the three colors offered on closed cars for the 1927 models.
Fawn Gray
#9a9186
1926–1927
A later-1926 / 1927 Pyroxylin color, one of the three colors offered on closed cars for the 1927 models.
Gunmetal Blue
#3a4450
1926–1927
A later-1926 / 1927 Pyroxylin color. Gunmetal Blue was one of the choices offered on open cars (touring/roadster) for the 1927 models.
Phoenix Brown
#4a3526
1926–1927
A later-1926 / 1927 Pyroxylin color. Phoenix Brown was one of the choices offered on open cars (touring/roadster) for the 1927 models.
Commercial Green
#33402d
1926–1927
A later-1926 / 1927 Pyroxylin color used on commercial bodies. Roadster pickups ordered from the factory with the bed installed came in Ford Commercial Green.
Drake Green
#2c3a30
1926–1927
A later-1926 / 1927 Pyroxylin color from the expanded palette introduced after the black-only era.
Moleskin
#8a8073
1926–1927
A later-1926 / 1927 Pyroxylin color, a soft grayish-tan from the expanded palette introduced after the black-only era.
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 β€” 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 β€” not by the on-screen swatch β€” and verify against an original paint chip or a professional color-matched sample before purchasing paint for a restoration.