How Do Disney Parks Always Look So Perfect?

One of the reasons that people love Disneyland and Walt Disney World is that these places are truly magical, a veritable feast for the eyes. Employees at the theme parks work hard at creating illusions so that you see what they want you to see, and the more mundane things — trash containers, air conditioning units, service buildings, etc. — tend to fade into the background. To do this, the parks’ so-called Imagineers developed paint colors such as “Go Away Green” and “No See-um Gray” to make the more unsightly things in the Magic Kingdom far less noticeable.

Now you see it, now you don’t:

Go Away Green is a gray-green color with a slight bluish hue. It helps to highlight the positives and eliminate the negatives.
One of the more well-known uses of Go Away Green is on the door of the exclusive Club 33 restaurant in New Orleans Square at Disneyland.
Disney won’t divulge the formula for Go Away Green, but these shades may help you hide things in plain sight: Benjamin Moore’s Aganthus Green, Behr’s Spice Garden, Glidden’s Pale Jade, and Sherwin-Williams’ Relish.