The '80s were brown: Shoddy Goods 056
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What do you see when you picture the 1980s? If you didn’t live through it, you’re probably seeing something very different from those of us who did. Hey, Gen X kid Jason Toon here. I’m using this issue of Shoddy Goods, the newsletter from Meh about consumer culture, to set the record straight on the real color of the decade.

“Do you have a moment to talk about velour?”
Every so often on social media, there’s a mild kerfuffle about what the 1980s looked like. One of we who were sentient at the time will point out that daily life during the age of Miami Vice, Rainbow Brite, and Cyndi Lauper was visually a lot more brown than the stereotypes would have it. Somebody else will agree that Stranger Things got that detail exactly right.
Then along comes the inevitable Actually Guy, with more confidence than expertise, to smugly scoff that you must be getting it mixed up with the '70s. Sigh.
So let’s settle this once and for all. The '80s were brown. Very, very brown. Nicotine-stain brown. Folgers crystals brown. Jell-O brand chocolate pudding brown. To paraphrase Orwell, if you want a picture of the '80s, imagine brown pillows on brown furniture on brown carpet - forever.
But don’t take my word for it. Behold some actual pictures of the '80s in all their brownanity.

The '80s I remember
The road to Brownsville
Two trends - both reactions to the hard-edged, boldly colored midcentury modern style - brought brown into the homes and wardrobes of the 1970s. One was a post-hippie back-to-the-land affinity for the rustic, the natural, the earthy. The other was a conservative traditionalism that favored colonial American decor and muted, restrained fashion. Mix in the eternal human love of coziness, and a thousand browns bloomed.
On January 1, 1980, everyone did not in fact run out to buy chrome furniture and fuchsia blazers with giant shoulder pads. All that fake wood paneling did not magically transform into white tile and glass block at the stroke of midnight. No feather-haired crowds descended on hair salons to get their laid-back '70s coiffs buzzed and gelled and spiked up for the '80s. That’s the inherent problem with assigning styles to any decade: the distinctive looks we associate with the time take years to kick in.

“Let’s get this shoot over with, it’s time for my Gaines-burger”
But it wasn’t just that there was still lots of '70s stuff around. Plenty of new brown stuff still sold like hotcakes (also brown). Even the original Atari 2600, an '80s icon if ever there was one, was bedecked with a strip of fake wood veneer. If you wanted your product in American homes, you bucked the brown at your peril.

No actual trees were harmed in the making of this Atari 2600
When was peak brown?
If I had to pin down peak brown, I’d say 1983. The more exuberant hues of the '70s like tomato and avocado were in retreat, but the pastels and brights of High '80s were still a little too outré for mass consumption. What was left? Raw umber, burnt sienna, tan, sepia, mahogany, and all the other crayons that kids never need to sharpen.

The taupe and the sable really make the beige pop
Flipping through magazines and catalogs from the time, it’s clear that the Brown-Industrial Complex was operating at full capacity. These weren’t just '70s leftovers. America still had an appetite for brown well after Duran Duran hit the charts. Even as other distinctively '80s touches creep in, like bed ruffles, brass hardware, and cooler grays, brown holds its own.

The Brown Age hits its zenith, 1982-1983
The early-mid '80s was also the golden age of what I call “brown shows”: TV shows with a muted color palette and a cozy, homey vibe, the kind of show you pull over yourself like a warm blanket. Newhart and Murder, She Wrote are classics of the genre. But just about every family sitcom cultivated that feeling: a herd of deer could pass unnoticed against the myriad earth tones in the living rooms of Family Ties and Mr. Belvedere.
What goes around comes a-brown
Americans had started wearing more reds, yellows, and blues by then, with higher-contrast patterns like stripes and polka dots. By mid-decade, a tropical palette of neons and pastels would join them to solidify what we think of as the ‘80s look. The rise of video games, personal computers, and blockbuster sci-fi movies also spread a sleek, high-tech aesthetic as seen in such era icons as silver Atari jackets and parachute pants.

Unwrapping the future
Decor, of course, changes more slowly than fashion. Home magazines may have promoted stark whites and cool pastels, and the candy-colored wackiness of the Memphis Group may have been hailed as the next big thing in postmodern living.
But working-class and middle-class homes tended to stay heavily browned, buffed, and beiged. The Roseanne living room debuted in 1988 and looked the same straight through the '90s, like the homes of pretty much everybody I knew. To this day, millions of Americans have decided that their comfy, cozy, warm-toned living rooms suit them just fine. “Nature-inspired Earth tones” remain at the top of the furniture industry’s list for 2025’s dominant color palettes, like Max Headroom never happened.
Commercial spaces, too, only embraced the Swatch aesthetic slowly and spottily. Sure, on The Facts of Life, the rustic Edna’s Edibles was replaced by the totally tubular Over Our Heads, with every '80s decor cliche from neon to pink to glass brick. But these photos of a mall from 1990 show acres of brown tile with cream accents. Even Taco Bell didn’t switch to a purple-and-aqua color scheme until 1992.
Those of us old enough to remember the '80s already know all this. Sure, we remember the multicolored puffy coats and the purple leg warmers and all those futuristic blank videotape jackets. But we also remember all that stuff happened against the backdrop of a million shades of brown.

Muddy Kodacolor memories of the way we browned
So much wood paneling, everywhere! I don’t even know if I could get a room wood paneled even if I wanted to. (Spoiler, I kind of want to.) Over on this week’s Shoddy Goods chat we’re sharing photos of the 80s, or 70s, or even 90s to check on how brown we were. Join in, let’s see that couch you grew up with!
—Dave (and the rest of Meh)
Past Shoddy Goods stories:
- Music stars who started their own food brands
- 1989 was a scary year to eat fruit
- Why Starting Lineup action figures don’t make the toy hall of fame
It’s time to dig out any pictures you’ve got of your house in the 70s, 80s, and 90s, so we can see exactly how brown it is. Here’s my dad in our wood-paneled living room, seemingly trying to feed me some pumpkin gunk:

- 17 comments, 20 replies
- Comment
No pics, not my thing
But I remember brown, orange, yellow and avocado green all going together.
@Cerridwyn Ugh, yes.
Followed in by those hideous dusty pastels which depress the hell out of me. We had a bathroom shower redone with blue and white Mexican bird tiles and I made my poor husband drive me all over this county looking for dark orange towels, for a kind of adobe look. But NO, nothing but dreary dusty peach.
You’d think someone would have some orange left over from the previous era but apparently not.
I like riotous color, myself.
@Kyeh go color
i was out somewhere a few months ago, eating lunch, and there was a couple of women, appeared to be mother and daughter. My guess is the mother was in her 80s and she was wearing righteous colors. I walked over and told her it was awesome she was wearing bright colors and how good it looked on her.
MEALS! DEALS! EELS! AWESOME!
@Cerridwyn AbsOLUTEly!

How I hope to be dressed in my 80s (Iris Apfel)
@Kyeh you go girl I love red. I love her pants. I don’t think I’d wear them because of the texture and the tightness but they’re pretty awesome.
POPSOCKETS! COURT DOCKETS! FOLK ROCK HITS! AWESOME!
@Cerridwyn Well, that picture is kind of aspirational for me; I look nothing like her and unless my social life changes a LOT I don’t know where I’d wear an outfit like that. But I love her sense of style and boldness and hope to be that fearless when I’m that age.
@Kyeh there does come a time in life when one does not give a f*** about what others think about what you look like.
@Cerridwyn @Kyeh
I’m sure you could head to salvo right now and pick something out pretty similar lol
This was early 70’s. And is in black and white. But I’m pretty sure you can use your imagination to see all the brown. And my hair is actually longer now
@capnjb Something like this?

@dave Very yes.
@dave I love this so much, thank you. Lost my dad last year and this has me wiping my eyes. Be good.
@capnjb I’m sorry to hear that. Even from this one photo you can see a lot of joy and fun
Me with the most amazing human to walk the earth, in my eyes of course.
In early 90’s was shopping for RVs, new or used. The brown/orange was everywhere! Oh yeah some avocado. Was very hard to find ones that didn’t.
Also looking at houses in Houston; these would have been built in 1950s-60s. Everything was dark walnut and most had a downstairs “bar” in rich brown pub colors. Luckily plans changed and moved to PNW to an almost-new house with white/neutral theme and I think birch cabinets.
I wish I had a picture of one of the houses we looked at a decade ago when we were moving. Out in the country, a white adobe house with arches and Spanish tile roof that really didn’t fit in with the rest of the properties around (but neighbors weren’t exactly close). The master bathroom was clearly original to the 1980’s build and it just made me think that this house was built to the whims of someone fueled primarily by cocaine.
Picture 200 square feet of brown shag carpeting, with a garden tub housed in a stepped pyramid in the center of the room. That brown shag, carpeted all the way up the three tiers right to the edge of the tub. And the whole effect doubled by the fact that the entire back wall was mirrored. So it looked like 400 square feet of brown shag carpet.
It’s not the same 80s as most of our memories, but it was definitely brown as could be.
@djslack
So like a brown Scarface? My dad’s friend that lived on the other side of the lake had a living room that was completely white. White carpet, white couch, white curtain and then the big gaudy 80’s mirrors and a hot tub right in the middle of the carpet on the living room floor. As a child I remember saying to him “you’re gonna get everything wet when you go in it.”
Then I grew up and saw Scarface and realized where they got the idea. They had bought their house and remodeled it shortly after Scarface came out.
@Star2236 Yes, i think you could say it was like a brown Scarface.
Welp, I guess I AM “that guy” trying to set the record, right. I was in junior high school as the 80s set off…. and do have pictures to prove it lol. The brown that you are “remembering” as from the early 80s is indeed, leftover “brown” from the mid 1970s. For example, wood paneling was very popular in homes of the 60s and 70s. Then people in the 80s bought those homes and to some extent, were stuck with it. I would agree the early 1980s had ample creme and tan colors though - i.e. “very light brown”.
I graduated high school in the mid 80s. The living room furniture was a teak wood set with cushions that could have the slip covers changed. My mom changed the slip covers every season, and yes, fall was brown. Summer was orange and yellow flowers, spring was green, yellow and white, winter was blue and white. The curtains matched until mom decide she liked sheer curtains. The coffee table and side tables were also teak.
We didn’t have brown walls on the main floor, but we did have hardwood floors. The living room and dining room were contiguous and the dining room furniture was dark cherry wood.
My mom has always had a thing for white. It got stronger in the 80s. The living and dining room walls were white. The bedroom walls were white with one wall with wallpaper for accent. The finished basement was where the wood panel walls were. We had a 48x15 foot rec room. Wood panel walls, dark wood doors, wood console TV, brick fireplace, dark carpet. Really dark room even with lights on, but GREAT for parties!
I married in 1982. Our wedding dishes were Mikasa with a brown rim. The matching stemware was brown as well. Thought I was all kinds of chic. I used brown and cream toned artificial flowers to decorate our apartment. My hubby brought a bahama bed set covered in orange to the wedding and it served as our couch. So much brown gold and orange. Blech
How about my house - now? It was built in the early 70s and there were some “upgrades” around 1980 or so. When I bought the house, the front door was hollow-core wood with one of those diamond-shaped windows. No pictures, as it went away in an early renovation. Sorry. (Not sorry!) The family room next to the garage still has the wooden walls and wood stove. This is the back door to the garage. Brown walls, brown door, brown tiles.

Then there’s the stove with wood bookshelves and a kindling box. It’s a very brown room.

Strangely I don’t really remember the '80s as being super brown. But then again I was a young mother, we didn’t spend a lot, because we didn’t have it, by the mid-days I was working as a nurse and wearing a lot of white with miscellaneous tops as I was working as a nurse and we had a really odd dress code. I do remember Olive and khaki. And some animal print stuff. I remember that I had this really cute pair of olive green pants with a buttons at the ankle and suspenders and I had a hat with a that was pulled up on the side with the elephant on it
We forget that the quintessential 80s guy, Ronald Reagan, was the first and only president in my lifetime to wear brown suits. Lots of brown suits. Very uncool, but proud of it.
ahh parachute pants!!!
@ndimitru
But… Were they brown?
@chienfou @ndimitru Only when the parachute fails to open.
Not saying the 80s weren’t brown (they were - and still common into the early 90s, I’d say), but part of what influences our memory is also the film stock of the era. Sure, some people bought their Ilford B&W or exotic Fuji film stock, but for home snapshots, I imagine most families bought what their local supermarket stocked - namely, Kodak Gold in ASA 100, 200, or 400 (if you were spendy - it always seemed to cost $1-2 more than the slower film for 3 rolls). Kodak Gold has a pretty prominent yellow/gold tint to it to help images look a bit “warmer…” one might call it brown or even slightly sepia these days.
Here are a few pics I spotted while going through some photos my sister sent me a few days ago.
While everything outside and home-decor related was still brown, the clothing was decidedly not.
I’m not telling you which kid was me.
@Thumperchick I’m betting you’re the little mischievous-looking one …
@Kyeh @Thumperchick
Y’alls know, I hope, that between Pantone and the runway that brown is in again for fall…
Circa 1989

when I was only two,
my mom was rockin’ a true decade’s 'do
The '90s hit hard

when she realized
that was not the right move.
@troy Oh, I think she looked gorgeous with the big hair!
late to the party on this one, but nothing makes me think of the brown-ness of that era quite like USAir’s brown-on-brown-on-brown livery:
