Detectable Design

What to wear to stay visible in Seattle in low light

In low light in Seattle, pick the brightest option you already own and add reflective details to places like hands and ankles that move as you run or bike.

Best common colors
WhiteYellowOrange
Hardest common colors to see
Dark GrayCharcoalNavy

If you own high-vis gear

High-vis gear still performs best overall here. If you own it, start with the top options below.

Fluorescent Yellow Bright White

Only have dark clothing?

  • Add reflective details at ankles, wrists, or other moving points.
  • Add a lighter outer layer if you have one.
  • Use lights as well if you are biking or moving near traffic in low light.

How common colors compare

Relative to average high-vis

Higher percentages mean the color gets closer to the average high-vis score in local street scenes under these conditions.

1
White best overall
relative to average high-vis 95%
0.45 avg score
2
Yellow strong fallback
relative to average high-vis 87%
0.42 avg score
3
Orange
relative to average high-vis 84%
0.40 avg score
4
Red
relative to average high-vis 81%
0.39 avg score
5
Pink
relative to average high-vis 78%
0.37 avg score
6
Light Gray
relative to average high-vis 75%
0.36 avg score
7
Beige
relative to average high-vis 73%
0.35 avg score
8
Light Blue
relative to average high-vis 69%
0.33 avg score
9
Blue
relative to average high-vis 68%
0.32 avg score
10
Black
relative to average high-vis 65%
0.31 avg score

Rows are ordered by how close each common color gets to the average high-vis benchmark in these conditions.

Local backdrop

Local backdrop elements

Signs / painted accents
56% of photos
Glass / blue surfaces
59% of photos
Vegetation
15% of photos

Why this works

In Seattle low light conditions, white comes closest to high-visibility performance from a normal closet, while fluorescent yellow and bright white still lead the true high-visibility benchmark.

Check local visibility

Action

  • Add reflective details at ankles, wrists, or other moving points so drivers catch motion early.
  • Keep at least one high-contrast element on your torso.
  • If you are biking, use a front white light and rear red light in addition to reflective details.

If you are choosing from regular clothing, start with white and add reflective details at moving points. It lands at about 95% of the average high-vis score here.

If you are packing one option for Seattle low light conditions, make it white if that is what you already own. If you have high-vis gear, fluorescent yellow still performs best overall.

Data confidence: medium

Examples

Images from the local dataset to show the local background.