If Hawaii really, really wants to embrace its move back to the “Rainbow Warriors,” the program will color-code its football field with red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.

Lost Lettermen has helpfully provided the blueprint for the field and an accompanying helmet concept:

Yeah, this isn’t going to happen. But we can dream, can’t we? Hawaii won’t enter the red zone inside the 20-yard line; the Rainbow Warriors will enter the orange zone – or the indigo zone, depending on the quarter. They’ll wear rainbow-spotted uniforms to properly blend in with the surroundings, keeping opponents off balance.

Hawaii will also need to spend thousands upon thousands of dollars on weekly upkeep, but that shouldn’t be a problem for a program that has had issues in the past providing fresh soap in the showers, right?

As Jim Weber of Lost Lettermen points out, going all-blue helped give Boise State an identity during its run from the outskirts of college football to multiple Bowl Championship Series appearances.

Eastern Washington went the all-red route, burning retinas throughout the Pacific Northwest:

The best comparison might be Florida International’s new basketball court, which attempts to capture the region’s sunshine, cool breeze and palm trees:

Why stop here? Conference rival San Diego State should make its field a replica of Tenochtitlan, the capital city of the Aztec empire. One end of Purdue’s field could be a glass of beer, the other a shot of whiskey. A herd of buffaloes cascade across Marshall’s Joan C. Edwards Stadium! The Teton Range in Wyoming’s end zones! The last one has already been done, actually:

(Thanks to Lost Lettermen for the Hawaii field.)