The Ceramic Watch Color Guide
Color is the one thing ceramic does that no metal can. A steel or titanium case is whatever grey the metal is; a ceramic case can be fired jet black, bright white, deep blue, forest green, or warm sand, and the color is baked all the way through the material rather than painted on top. This is why color, not grade, is the axis this guide is built around.
The color is the material, not a coating
High-tech ceramic starts as a fine powder (usually zirconium dioxide, ZrO2), mixed with a pigment, pressed into a case blank, and sintered in a furnace at well over a thousand degrees. The pigment is fired into the ceramic itself, so the color is uniform through the whole part. A coating on metal, by contrast, is a thin colored skin (PVD, DLC, paint) sitting on a grey substrate. That difference is the whole story: a scuff on a black ceramic case shows black underneath, while a scratch through a black coating on steel shows bright metal.
A colored ceramic case will not fade in sunlight, will not yellow, and cannot have its color rub off at the edges over years of wear. When you buy a green ceramic watch, it stays that green.
The colors, and what makes each hard
Not every color is equally easy to make. The pigment has to survive the sintering temperature and stay stable, so some colors took makers years to get right.
| Color | Notes |
|---|---|
| Black | The most common and most forgiving ceramic color, and the one most associated with the material since the Rado and Chanel J12 era. |
| White | The signature ceramic look and genuinely hard to do well in any other material. A durable, non-yellowing white is intrinsic to the zirconia and stays bright. |
| Blue | A saturated, stable blue that holds up to firing. A popular way to bring color to a sport or dive ceramic. |
| Green | Harder to achieve as a stable fired pigment, so rarer, and a standout when a maker pulls it off. |
| Grey | From pale to gunmetal, often the most understated ceramic, closest in tone to a titanium or steel case but with ceramic hardness. |
| Sand | Warm beige and desert tones, the newest and least common of the ceramic colors this guide tracks. |
Case color is not dial color
This guide catalogs by the color of the ceramic case, not the dial. A single white ceramic model can be offered with several dial colors; it is still one white case. A model with a genuinely different-colored case (a black version and a blue version) is tracked as two color entries. When you filter by color here, you are filtering the material you actually wear on your wrist.
Browse ceramic by color
Every color is a collection. Start with the two classics or jump to a color you rarely see in metal.
Frequently asked questions
What colors do ceramic watches come in?
Ceramic can be fired in colors no metal case can match. Black and white lead, and this guide also catalogs blue, green, grey, and sand ceramic cases. The color is part of the material itself, not a coating.
Does the color on a ceramic watch fade or wear off?
No. The color is fired into high-tech ceramic all the way through, so it cannot flake, fade in sunlight, or rub off with wear, unlike a PVD or DLC coating on metal. A scuff on a colored ceramic case shows the same color underneath.
Why is white only really possible in ceramic?
A durable, non-yellowing white case is very hard to achieve in metal, which is why white ceramic became a signature look (Rado, IWC, Chanel J12 white). The whiteness is intrinsic to the zirconia-based ceramic and stays bright.