Green
#008000
Cobalt
#0047AB
Green & Cobalt
Green and Cobalt Color Combination — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
ComplementaryGreen and Cobalt Color Meaning
Green and cobalt creates the Harrods Knightsbridge institutional prestige combination — because Harrods (Harrods Ltd, 87-135 Brompton Road, London SW1X 7XL, Knightsbridge, the most internationally celebrated single department store in the world, founded 1849 by Charles Henry Harrod, currently owned by the State of Qatar / Qatar Investment Authority, attracting approximately 15 million annual visitors and with approximately £2 billion annual revenue — the most prestigious single retail destination in the United Kingdom and the most internationally recognized single department store in the world) uses the combination of dark forest-green (the most specifically Harrods-institutional and the most precisely Harrods-branded dark green that covers the most famous department store exterior in the world — the Harrods building facade at 87-135 Brompton Road is clad in the most specifically Harrods-institutional dark-green terracotta tiles, making Harrods dark-green the most specifically single-brand-identifying retail green in British commercial history) and the Royal Warrant cobalt-blue (the most specifically Royal Warrant-authenticated and the most institutionally royal-blue of the Harrods packaging, carrier bags, and the most specifically institutional Harrods cobalt in the store's luxury retail brand identity) as the most specifically Knightsbridge-institutional and the most internationally prestige-branded green-and-cobalt warm-neutral-cool.
The Liberty London Arts and Crafts tradition (Liberty & Co., 210-220 Regent Street, London W1B 5AH — the most specifically Arts and Crafts-associated and the most historically William Morris-affiliated single London department store, founded 1875 by Arthur Lasenby Liberty, using the most characteristically dark forest-green and the most specifically cobalt-Liberty-blue in the Arts and Crafts textile and design tradition that defined the Liberty style — the most internationally recognized Arts and Crafts design tradition) creates the green-and-cobalt warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically Liberty-Arts-and-Crafts and the most precisely William-Morris-textile-authenticated warm-neutral-cool scale.
The Bohemian and Czech decorative arts cobalt-and-green tradition (specifically the Bohemian Forest glassworks / Šumava glass industry, the most historically significant Central European glass production region, and the Meissen porcelain cobalt-blue and green tradition — creating the most specifically Central-European-decorative-arts and the most historically Bohemian-glass warm-neutral-cool in the most important single European decorative arts tradition) creates the green-and-cobalt warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically Bohemian-glass-historically documented and the most broadly Central-European-decorative warm-neutral-cool scale.
Green and Cobalt in Design
Green and cobalt in design creates the most specifically Harrods Knightsbridge institutional prestige and the most Liberty-Arts-and-Crafts warm-neutral-cool — Harrods dark-green most-internationally-celebrated-department-store most-precisely-Harrods-branded SW1X, Liberty & Co most-specifically-Arts-and-Crafts most-historically-William-Morris-affiliated, Bohemian Forest glassworks most-historically-significant-Central-European-glass. For Harrods and London luxury retail heritage organizations, Liberty Arts and Crafts heritage, and any design context where the most specifically Knightsbridge-institutional and the most prestige-branded green-and-cobalt is needed, this creates the most precisely calibrated and the most Harrods-authentic warm-neutral-cool identity.
The combination's institutional prestige authority (Harrods dark-green's most-specifically-single-brand-identifying-retail warm-neutral against Royal-Warrant-cobalt's most-specifically-royal-appointed creates the most institutionally prestigious and the most internationally prestige-branded green-and-cobalt — the Harrods dark-green exterior tiles are the most specifically single-store-brand-identifying architectural green in British commercial history, covering the most famous department store facade in the world) gives it an unusual single-store-brand-institutional prestige authority.
In contemporary Harrods and Knightsbridge luxury retail heritage brand design, Liberty Arts and Crafts heritage organizations, and Bohemian glass heritage, the green-and-cobalt combination creates the most specifically Harrods-institutional and the most precisely prestige-branded warm-neutral-cool identity.
Green and Cobalt Color Style
Green and cobalt define the visual character of Harrods Knightsbridge and the Liberty Arts and Crafts tradition — the dark forest-green of the Harrods terracotta-tile exterior against the Royal Warrant cobalt-blue of the Harrods packaging and brand identity, the Liberty Arts and Crafts dark-green and cobalt-blue textile tradition. Institutionally prestige-branded Harrods dark-green against the most specifically Royal-Warrant-cobalt.
The mood is of Harrods Knightsbridge institutional luxury warmth — the specific quality of the Harrods Brompton Road facade at dusk, where the dark forest-green of the most famous department store exterior and the cobalt-blue of the Royal Warrant-authorized packaging create the most specifically institutional-luxury and the most internationally prestige-retail warm-neutral-cool. Green and cobalt is the palette of the most specifically Harrods-SW1X-institutional and the most Liberty-Arts-and-Crafts-William-Morris warm-neutral-cool.
Contemporary applications include Harrods Knightsbridge luxury heritage, Liberty & Co Regent Street Arts and Crafts heritage, and any brand wanting the most specifically institutional-luxury and the most precisely prestige-branded green-and-cobalt combination.
What Green and Cobalt Mean Together
Harrods 87-135 Brompton Road (Harrods Ltd, Knightsbridge, London SW1X 7XL, the most internationally recognized single retail destination in the world, with the most specifically Harrods-dark-green terracotta-tile building exterior that is the most precisely single-store-brand-identifying retail green in British commercial architecture — 15 million annual visitors, Royal Warrants from HM King Charles III and other members of the Royal Family — the most specifically Royal-Warrant-appointed and the most internationally retail-prestigious green-and-cobalt warm-neutral-cool) — creates the green-and-cobalt warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically Harrods-institutionally branded and the most internationally retail-recognized warm-neutral-cool scale.
Liberty & Co. Tudor building (Liberty & Co., 210-220 Regent Street, London W1B 5AH, the most specifically Tudor Revival building in central London, constructed 1924 from the timber of two Royal Navy warships — HMS Impregnable and HMS Hindustan — the most historically architecturally distinctive and the most specifically Liberty-Arts-and-Crafts-branded single retail building in London, consistently using dark forest-green and cobalt-blue in the Liberty print tradition, the Morris & Co. Arts and Crafts textile legacy, and the most specifically William-Morris-influenced warm-neutral-cool) — creates the green-and-cobalt warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically Liberty-Tudor-building-architecturally-historic and the most Arts-and-Crafts-authenticated warm-neutral-cool scale.
The Bohemian Forest / Šumava glassworks (the Böhmischer Wald / Šumava glass-production tradition, centred in Klatovy and Sušice, Bohemia, Czech Republic — the most historically significant Central European hand-blown glass production region, producing the most specifically Bohemian cobalt-blue and forest-green glass from the 16th century through the 19th century, the most comprehensively Bohemian-glass-historically documented single Central European glass tradition) — creates the green-and-cobalt warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically Bohemian-glass-historically documented and the most broadly Central-European-decorative warm-neutral-cool scale.
Green and Cobalt in Branding
Green and cobalt branding projects Harrods Knightsbridge institutional luxury prestige and Liberty Arts and Crafts William Morris authority — Harrods 15-million-annual-visitors most-internationally-celebrated-department-store dark-green-and-Royal-Warrant-cobalt, Liberty & Co Tudor-building most-specifically-Arts-and-Crafts warm-neutral-cool, Bohemian Forest glassworks most-historically-significant-Central-European-glass. Luxury retail and Arts and Crafts heritage brands and any organization wanting the most specifically institutional-luxury and the most prestige-branded green-and-cobalt benefits from this extraordinary Harrods-Liberty-Bohemian triple institutional authority.
The combination's institutional prestige authority (Harrods most-famous-department-store-exterior dark-green + Royal-Warrant-cobalt = the most specifically single-brand-identifying and the most institutionally luxury-retail warm-neutral-cool — the most internationally prestige-branded green facade and the most specifically Royal-Warrant-authorized cobalt packaging in British retail history) creates brand identity with extraordinary institutional luxury-retail prestige authority.
Brands
Industries
Green and Cobalt in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, green and cobalt creates the most specifically Harrods Knightsbridge institutional luxury and the most Liberty-Arts-and-Crafts warm-neutral-cool wardrobe — the combination of Harrods dark-green institutional and Royal-Warrant-cobalt creates the dressing of the most specifically institutional-luxury and the most prestige-retail warm-neutral-cool: the Harrods dark-green garment with Royal-Warrant-cobalt accents, the cobalt dress with Liberty Arts-and-Crafts forest-green detail. This is the Knightsbridge wardrobe — Harrods most-famous-department-store dark-green against Royal-Warrant-cobalt.
Interior design with green and cobalt creates the most specifically Harrods institutional luxury and the most Liberty-Arts-and-Crafts William-Morris domestic environment — green in Harrods-dark-green-inspired deep botanical green walls, forest-green architectural accent elements, and institutionally prestige-branded dark-green accents against cobalt in Royal-Warrant-cobalt accent pieces, Liberty-Arts-and-Crafts cobalt-blue textile elements, and the most specifically Morris-&-Co. cobalt-blue botanical surfaces creates the most specifically Harrods-Knightsbridge-institutional and the most Liberty-Arts-and-Crafts interior.
In the Harrods, Liberty & Co., and Bohemian glass heritage brand tradition, the green-and-cobalt combination creates the most specifically Knightsbridge-institutional-luxury and the most precisely prestige-branded warm-neutral-cool.
Green and Cobalt — Each Color Separately
Green
#008000
Green — the Harrods Knightsbridge institutional green. The most specifically SW1X-9XL and the most institutionally prestige-branded retail warm-neutral.
Explore Green →Cobalt
#0047AB
Cobalt — the Royal Warrant prestige cobalt. The most specifically royal-appointed and the most institutionally prestigious cool in British retail heritage.
Explore Cobalt →Green and Cobalt — FAQ
- Do green and cobalt go together?
- Yes — green and cobalt create the Harrods Knightsbridge combination: Harrods (87-135 Brompton Road, SW1X 7XL, founded 1849, 15 million annual visitors, approximately £2 billion annual revenue) uses dark forest-green exterior tiles — the most specifically single-store-brand-identifying retail green in British commercial architecture — with Royal Warrant cobalt-blue packaging. Liberty & Co. (210-220 Regent Street, Tudor building 1924) uses the same forest-green and cobalt-blue in its Arts and Crafts William Morris textile tradition.
- What does green and cobalt mean?
- Green and cobalt together mean Harrods Knightsbridge institutional luxury prestige — Harrods 15-million-annual-visitors most-internationally-celebrated-department-store, Liberty & Co. most-specifically-Arts-and-Crafts William-Morris warm-neutral-cool, Bohemian Forest glassworks most-historically-significant-Central-European-glass, and the general meaning of Harrods dark-green (the most specifically single-brand-identifying retail warm-neutral) against Royal-Warrant-cobalt (the most specifically Royal-Warrant-authorized and the most institutionally prestige-retail cool) in the most specifically Knightsbridge-institutional warm-neutral-cool.
- How does green and cobalt compare to green and navy?
- Cobalt (#0047AB) is bright royal-blue, institutional, prestige-branded — Harrods Royal Warrant, Liberty Arts and Crafts, Bohemian glass. Navy (#001F5B) is darker, more aristocratic, more traditionally British — Ralph Lauren Polo preppy, Royal Navy, traditional British naval. Green-and-cobalt is the Harrods Knightsbridge institutional luxury (retail-prestige, Royal-Warrant, Arts-and-Crafts); green-and-navy is the Ralph Lauren Polo preppy aristocratic (traditional British, aristocratic, preppy American). Cobalt is the Harrods carrier bag; navy is the Ralph Lauren Polo shirt.
- What accent colors work with green and cobalt?
- Gold adds the most specifically Royal Warrant metallic Harrods prestige. White adds the most specifically Harrods-clean retail purity. Warm cream adds the most naturally Arts and Crafts domestic warmth. Red adds the most specifically Royal ceremonial contrast. Deep black adds institutional-luxury maximum contrast. Pale grey adds the most specifically Knightsbridge-architectural complement. Most powerful in the Harrods Knightsbridge vocabulary: dark institutional green, Royal-Warrant-cobalt, gold warrant-metallic, white retail-clean, and the specific most-institutionally-prestige-branded and the most internationally retail-recognized warm-neutral-cool of the most celebrated department store in the world.