Hermes Terminology Glossary: Every Term, Code & Abbreviation Defined
PDH, GHW, PHW, RGH, permabrass: these hardware terms are not interchangeable. Seasonal colorway, tonal family, undertone, colorway code: these color terms carry specific meanings. Using them precisely matters in boutique conversations and on resale platforms.
Why Vocabulary Matters
The language of Hermes color and design has its own vocabulary — and using it precisely matters both in boutique conversations and in secondary market transactions. PDH, GHW, PHW, RGH, permabrass: these hardware terms are not interchangeable. Seasonal colorway, tonal family, undertone, colorway code: these color terms carry specific meanings that affect how you communicate preferences to an SA or evaluate listings on resale platforms.
This glossary defines every color, design, hardware, and construction term used across hermesguidancelounge.com — from the designer vocabulary to the collector shorthand that signals genuine expertise. For the complete color name and code reference, see Hermes Color Names Glossary: Every Color Code and Family Explained.
Terms are grouped by category: hardware, color, construction, leather, and collector shorthand. Each entry includes the precise definition and, where relevant, the practical context in which the term is used. Cross-references link to the relevant hub pages for deeper analysis of each concept.
Hardware Finish Terms
Hardware finish abbreviations are the most commonly misused terms in Hermes collector vocabulary. Each abbreviation has a specific meaning and they are not interchangeable. For full hardware guidance, see the Hardware & Craftsmanship Guide.
Color & Tonal Terms
Color vocabulary in the Hermes context has precise meanings that differ from general color terminology. For the full color reference, see the Colors Reference Hub.
Construction Terms
Construction terminology describes how Hermes bags are assembled and finished. Understanding these terms through a visual and design lens produces the most useful insights. For full construction analysis, see the Sellier vs Retourne hub.
Leather Terms
Leather vocabulary is most useful when understood through its color and visual behavior implications. For full leather analysis, see the Leathers & Materials Guide.
Collector Shorthand
Collector shorthand is the abbreviated vocabulary used in resale listings, forum discussions, and boutique conversations. Using it correctly signals genuine knowledge.
Quick Reference Table
Key Hermes Terms — Abbreviation, Full Name & Practical Usage Context
| Term / Abbreviation | Full Name | Category | Practical Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| PHW / PDH | Palladium Hardware | Hardware | Cool silver finish — universal color compatibility |
| GHW | Gold Hardware | Hardware | Warm yellow-gold — earth tones, classic styling |
| RGH | Rose Gold Hardware | Hardware | Pink-gold — pale warm neutrals only |
| Permabrass | Antique Brass Hardware | Hardware | Rarest standard finish — collector premium |
| Guilloche | Engraved Hardware Surface | Hardware | Premium surface treatment — scratch concealment |
| Undertone | Secondary Color Temperature | Color | Warm / cool / neutral — determines pairing behavior |
| Tonal Family | Color Group by Undertone | Color | Groups colorways with shared undertone direction |
| Permanent Palette | Year-Round Core Colors | Color | Noir, Etoupe, Craie — strongest resale consistency |
| Seasonal Colorway | Limited-Season Color | Color | Retired after 1-2 seasons — can appreciate if discontinued |
| Colorway Code | Internal Hermes Color Number | Color | e.g. 89 (Noir), 18 (Craie) — used in documentation |
| Sellier | Exterior Stitching Construction | Construction | Sharp geometric silhouette — formal, concentrates color |
| Retourne | Interior Stitching Construction | Construction | Soft rounded silhouette — relaxed, diffuses color |
| SO | Special Order | Collector | Custom color / leather / hardware combination |
| SA | Sales Associate | Collector | Boutique relationship — relevant for allocation |
| BNIB | Brand New in Box | Collector | Unused with all original packaging — highest resale tier |
| HTF | Hard to Find | Collector | Rare combination — commands secondary market premium |
The buyer who says “I am looking for Craie with PHW in Epsom” communicates something fundamentally different from the buyer who says “I want a white bag with silver hardware.” The first statement specifies a colorway with a known undertone behavior, a hardware finish with precise visual characteristics, and a leather with a specific color-intensification effect. The second statement communicates a general preference that could describe a thousand different bags.
Precision vocabulary is not pedantry — it is the practical language of a market where the differences between adjacent colorways, hardware finishes, and leather types are meaningful and consequential. The buyer who uses it correctly communicates expertise that changes how boutique conversations proceed and how resale negotiations resolve.
Bottom Line: Learn the vocabulary of the colorways you are interested in. Use hardware abbreviations precisely. Distinguish permanent palette from seasonal. The vocabulary is not decoration — it is applied expertise.
The most searched Hermes vocabulary and terminology questions on this hub
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Hermes Color Names & Codes: Full Glossary
Every Hermes colorway name, internal color code, and tonal family grouping — the complete color vocabulary reference for collectors and buyers.
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PHW vs PDH vs GHW vs RGH: What's the Difference?
Why PHW and PDH refer to the same finish, and how GHW, RGH, and permabrass each differ in visual character, color compatibility, and aging behavior.
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Sellier vs Retourne: What Do They Mean?
The precise construction difference between sellier and retourne — and how each term signals a distinct design register, color reading, and lifestyle context.
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What Is a Tonal Family in Hermes Color?
How tonal families group Hermes colorways by undertone direction — and why knowing which family a color belongs to is the most practical color selection tool.
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Togo vs Epsom vs Clemence: Key Differences
The three most common Hermes grain leathers compared through their color behavior — how each grain type changes the way a colorway reads on the bag.
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What Is a Permanent Palette Color?
How permanent palette status differs from seasonal colorway — and why it is the most reliable predictor of secondary market resale consistency.
Frequently Asked Questions
PHW and PDH refer to the same hardware finish — palladium, the cool silver hardware. PDH (Palladium Hardware) is the earlier abbreviation that appears frequently in Hermes boutique documentation and older resale listings. PHW is the more commonly used abbreviation in current collector vocabulary and on hermesguidancelounge.com. Both are correct and interchangeable. When reading resale listings, treat PDH and PHW as identical. For full hardware guidance, see the Hardware & Craftsmanship Guide.
A tonal family groups Hermes colorways by shared undertone direction. The five primary tonal families are: warm neutrals (Etoupe, Trench, Macadamia, Nata), cool neutrals (Craie, Gris Tourterelle, Gris Asphalte), deep shades (Noir, Bleu Nuit, Rouge H), blues (Blue Jean, Bleu Saphir), and greens (Vert Amande, Vert Cypress). Knowing which tonal family a colorway belongs to predicts its hardware compatibility, wardrobe integration behavior, and which other colorways it pairs with naturally in a collection. For the full tonal family reference, see the Colors Reference Hub.
Permanent palette colors — Noir, Etoupe, Craie, Bleu Nuit, Rouge H, Gris Tourterelle — are available year-round and are not subject to seasonal retirement. Seasonal colorways are introduced for specific Autumn/Winter or Spring/Summer collections and then retired, sometimes after a single season. Permanent palette status is the most reliable predictor of secondary market resale consistency. Seasonal colorways can appreciate significantly when discontinued — particularly if they sit in a neutral or jewel tone family — but the appreciation is less predictable than permanent palette performance. See Seasonal Color Release Predictions 2026.
Sellier construction places the stitching on the exterior of the bag, creating sharp geometric corners, precise edges, and a formal structured silhouette. The term comes from the French for saddler — the exterior stitching technique is derived from traditional saddle-making. Contrast with retourne (interior stitching, softer form). Sellier construction concentrates color saturation — the same colorway reads more intense on sellier than on retourne. For the full construction comparison, see the Sellier vs Retourne hub.
A Hermes colorway code is the internal alphanumeric identifier assigned to each colorway by Hermes — for example, 89 for Noir, 18 for Craie. These codes appear in Hermes boutique documentation, production records, and are increasingly referenced on secondary market platforms and in collector vocabulary. Using the correct code when discussing a colorway eliminates ambiguity — particularly for colors with similar names or for seasonal colorways that may share descriptive names across different seasons. For the full color code reference, see Hermes Color Names Glossary: Every Color Code and Family Explained.