Putty solarized the manual way

Here you go:

  • Default Foreground: 131, 148, 150
  • Default Bold Foreground: 147, 161, 161
  • Default Background: 0, 43, 54
  • Default Bold Background: 7, 54, 66
  • Cursor Text: 0, 43, 54
  • Cursor Colour: 131, 148, 150
  • ANSI Black: 7, 54, 66
  • ANSI Black Bold: 0, 43, 54
  • ANSI Red: 220, 50, 47
  • ANSI Red Bold: 203, 75, 22
  • ANSI Green: 133, 153, 0
  • ANSI Green Bold: 88, 110, 117
  • ANSI Yellow: 181, 137, 0
  • ANSI Yellow Bold: 101, 123, 131
  • ANSI Blue: 38, 139, 210
  • ANSI Blue Bold: 131, 148, 150
  • ANSI Magenta: 211, 54, 130
  • ANSI Magenta Bold: 108, 113, 196
  • ANSI Cyan: 42, 161, 152
  • ANSI Cyan Bold: 147, 161, 161
  • ANSI White: 238, 232, 213
  • ANSI White Bold: 253, 246, 227

(N.B.: You can download a portable version of PuTTY that doesn't require admin privileges and stores its configuration in a local file instead of the registry. You can then edit those files with a text editor.)


Portable Putty is the way to go... not just for the fact you don't need Admin, but just the convenience of being able to copy sessions and settings easily from one PC to another (I save mine on my NAS)

Anyway, I've typed in the colours into Portable Putty, and extracted the relevant part of the conf file for your pleasure. As Ravindranath Akila said in the comments above, make you you also save to the default profile.

Colour21\253,246,227\
Colour20\238,232,213\
Colour19\147,161,161\
Colour18\42,161,152\
Colour17\108,113,196\
Colour16\211,54,130\
Colour15\131,148,150\
Colour14\38,139,210\
Colour13\101,123,131\
Colour12\181,137,0\
Colour11\88,110,117\
Colour10\133,153,0\
Colour9\203,75,22\
Colour8\220,50,47\
Colour7\0,43,54\
Colour6\7,54,66\
Colour5\131,148,150\
Colour4\0,43,54\
Colour3\7,54,66\
Colour2\0,43,54\
Colour1\147,161,161\
Colour0\131,148,150\

Enjoy!


Without administrative privileges, you can import a .reg file and apply it to your HKCU (which Bob alluded to above).

  1. In Windows, open a command prompt (cmd).
  2. Enter reg import <path\to\.reg\file>

With this solarized_dark.reg file, it created a session named "Solarized Dark," which I then applied to the default.