Let the fire fade — not your focus.
Designed for long nights and longer thoughts.
Ashen is a warm, muted theme born from the glow of dying embers — rich in reds, orange highlights, and layers of gray. Inspired by Dark Souls III, it's crafted to be gentle on the eyes and steady on the mind. Whether you're deep in the terminal or writing code by candlelight — Ashen offers a calm, focused atmosphere for development after dark.
This monorepository contains official implementations of Ashen across a range of editors, terminals, tools, and more — each carefully tuned to carry the same muted warmth. The project lives on sourcehut and is mirrored on GitHub. To report issues or make requests, visit the ticket tracker or contact the mailing list (possibly by carrier pigeon.)
Where syntax takes shape.
Words against the dark — quiet, deliberate.
- Ghostty — sleek and spectral.
- Kitty — for configuration fiends seeking warm tones.
- Alacritty — no distractions, just firepower.
- Windows Terminal — Ashen for the dark side.
- WezTerm — endlessly configurable, never loud.
- foot — a dark theme for a light terminal.
Terminal tools softened by firelight.
- bat — like
cat, but warmer. - eza — a modern
lswith subtle highlights. - lazygit —
gitbathed in ember tones. - yazi — fast, clean file browsing.
- fzf — fuzzy finding with focus.
- fish — the friendly shell made even friendlier.
- television — fuzzier
fzfin gray. - aerc — email done plainly, with muted elegance.
Let your environment glow.
- waybar — a status bar with just enough light.
- sway — a tiled workspace in quiet tones.
- fuzzel — launch your apps with a whisper.
- zathura — focused reading for tired eyes.
- Firefox — the web, dimmed for comfort.
- Monkeytype — compose Shakespeare, Ashen style.
For bringing Ashen elsewhere.
- tmTheme — classic syntax format (TextMate, Sublime, and more).
I welcome contributions! If you have a problem or a request, please submit a ticket or contact the mailing list. Send patches to ~ficd/ashen-devel.
If you're porting Ashen, use the existing ports as a reference for the palette and overall feel. Treat Helix as the "ultimate" guide on the colors to be assigned to syntax elements.
As a rule of thumb: numbers and builtin literal types should be blue, strings
red_glowing, keywords red_ashen, operators orange_blaze, delimiters
orange_smolder, brackets g_6, and special punctuation orange_golden.
red_flame should only be used for errors, and orange_golden is the
preferred color for warnings. Ashen doesn't use green, so you can pick an
appropriate substitute from the palette. For example, the terminal themes use
orange_blaze for green, which looks good in most applications.

