Green
#008000
Violet
#7F00FF
Green & Violet
Green and Violet Color Combination — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
ComplementaryGreen and Violet Color Meaning
Green and violet creates the Kawachi Fuji Garden wisteria tunnel combination — because the Kawachi Fuji Garden (河内藤園, Kawachi Fuji-en, 2-2-48 Kawachi, Yahatahigashi-ku, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan, the most internationally celebrated single wisteria garden in the world, featuring more than 150 wisteria plants of 20 varieties in the most spectacular wisteria tunnels in Japan — each tunnel approximately 100 metres in length, covered in the cascading violet blooms of Wisteria floribunda, the Japanese wisteria) creates the most specifically Japanese-botanical and the most internationally wisteria-celebrated green-and-violet warm-neutral-cool through the combination of the deep green of the garden foliage, lawn, and wisteria-leaf canopy (the botanical-green backdrop of the Kawachi Fuji wisteria garden in late April and early May — the peak wisteria blooming season when the garden is open to the public and when the most internationally photographed single botanical garden in Japan is at its most spectacular) against the cascading violet of the Wisteria floribunda blooms (the most specifically Japanese-botanical and the most precisely wisteria-spectral violet-purple of the hanging flower clusters / racemes that can reach 1.5 metres in length).
The Ashikaga Flower Park wisteria tradition (Ashikaga Flower Park / Ashikaga Furusato Park, 329-42100 Ashikaga, Tochigi Prefecture, Japan, one of CNN's most spectacular gardens in the world in 2014, featuring a 144-year-old Wisteria floribunda 'Multijuga' tree covering 1,990 square metres — the largest single wisteria tree in Japan, whose violet blooms create the most specifically ancient-individual-tree and the most dramatically large-scale wisteria green-and-violet warm-neutral-cool in Japanese horticulture) creates the green-and-violet warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically ancient-wisteria-tree and the most dramatically large-scale Japanese botanical warm-neutral-cool scale.
The Pre-Raphaelite botanical tradition (specifically John Everett Millais, William Holman Hunt, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti — the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, whose paintings consistently use the most specifically botanical-green and the most precisely violet-flower warm-neutral-cool in the most botanically detailed and the most specifically English-hedge-and-meadow-botanical paintings of the 1848–1870 period, particularly Millais' 'Ophelia' 1851–1852, Tate Britain, London, featuring the most specifically botanical-green water-surface and the most precisely violet-willow-herb botanical detail) creates the green-and-violet warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically Pre-Raphaelite-botanical and the most precisely Tate-Britain-documented warm-neutral-cool scale.
Green and Violet in Design
Green and violet in design creates the most specifically Kawachi Fuji Garden wisteria-tunnel and the most Pre-Raphaelite-botanical warm-neutral-cool — Kawachi Fuji-en most-internationally-celebrated-wisteria-garden 150-plants-20-varieties, Ashikaga Flower Park 144-year-old-Wisteria-floribunda most-dramatic-ancient-wisteria, Pre-Raphaelite Millais 'Ophelia' most-specifically-botanical-green-and-violet. For Japanese botanical garden heritage organizations, Pre-Raphaelite cultural heritage, and any design context where the most specifically wisteria-botanical and the most precisely Japanese-horticultural green-and-violet is needed, this creates the most precisely calibrated and the most Kawachi-Fuji-authentic warm-neutral-cool identity.
The combination's Japanese botanical authority (wisteria-foliage green's most-specifically-Kawachi-Fuji-garden warm-neutral against Wisteria floribunda violet's most-precisely-botanical-spectral creates the most specifically Japanese-botanical and the most dramatically wisteria-horticultural green-and-violet — the Kawachi Fuji wisteria tunnels create the most internationally photographed single botanical warm-neutral-cool in Japan) gives it an unusual Japanese wisteria-botanical authority.
In contemporary Kawachi Fuji Garden and Japanese botanical heritage brand design, Ashikaga Flower Park heritage, and Pre-Raphaelite cultural heritage organizations, the green-and-violet combination creates the most specifically wisteria-botanical and the most precisely Japanese-horticultural warm-neutral-cool identity.
Green and Violet Color Style
Green and violet define the visual character of the Kawachi Fuji wisteria tunnels and the Pre-Raphaelite botanical tradition — the deep green of the Kawachi Fuji garden foliage and lawn against the cascading violet of the Wisteria floribunda raceme, the Millais 'Ophelia' botanical-green water-surface against the violet-willow-herb botanical detail. Deep botanical wisteria-garden green against the most specifically Wisteria-floribunda-botanical violet.
The mood is of Kawachi Fuji Japanese wisteria-garden spring warmth — the specific quality of the Kawachi Fuji wisteria tunnel in late April, where the deep green of the garden canopy and the cascading violet of the Wisteria floribunda create the most specifically Japanese-botanical and the most dramatically tunnel-horticultural green-and-violet. Green and violet is the palette of the most specifically Kawachi-Fuji-wisteria-botanical and the most Pre-Raphaelite-Millais-botanically-precise warm-neutral-cool.
Contemporary applications include Kawachi Fuji Garden Kitakyushu heritage, Ashikaga Flower Park heritage, Pre-Raphaelite collection Tate Britain, and any brand wanting the most specifically wisteria-botanical and the most precisely Japanese-horticultural green-and-violet combination.
What Green and Violet Mean Together
The Kawachi Fuji wisteria tunnels (Kawachi Fuji-en, 2-2-48 Kawachi, Yahatahigashi-ku, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka — the most internationally photographed single wisteria garden in the world, with more than 150 wisteria plants of 20 Wisteria floribunda varieties, the wisteria tunnels approximately 100 metres in length covered in cascading violet racemes — open for approximately 2–3 weeks in late April to early May, visited by thousands of international visitors annually, ranking among Japan's most spectacular garden events) — creates the green-and-violet warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically Kawachi-Fuji-internationally-photographed and the most dramatically Japanese-wisteria-tunnel warm-neutral-cool scale.
Ashikaga Flower Park (329-42100 Ashikaga, Tochigi Prefecture, Japan — the 144-year-old Wisteria floribunda 'Multijuga' tree, the largest single wisteria in Japan, covering 1,990 square metres, listed by CNN Travel as one of the 10 most spectacular gardens in the world, 2014 — whose violet canopy above the deep-green lawn creates the most specifically ancient-individual-wisteria-tree and the most dramatically large-scale green-and-violet warm-neutral-cool in Japanese botanical heritage) — creates the green-and-violet warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically ancient-single-wisteria-tree and the most broadly CNN-internationally-celebrated warm-neutral-cool scale.
John Everett Millais' 'Ophelia' (1851–1852, oil on canvas, 76.2 × 111.8 cm, Tate Britain, London — the most specifically Pre-Raphaelite and the most precisely botanically documented green-and-violet warm-neutral-cool in Victorian English painting, featuring the most specifically botanical-green water-surface with more than 50 individually identified botanical species, and the most precisely documented violet willowherb / Epilobium hirsutum as the most specifically green-and-violet botanical warm-neutral-cool) — creates the green-and-violet warm-neutral-cool at the most specifically Tate-Britain-Millais-Pre-Raphaelite and the most precisely 50-individually-identified-botanical-species warm-neutral-cool scale.
Green and Violet in Branding
Green and violet branding projects Kawachi Fuji Japanese wisteria-botanical authority and Pre-Raphaelite Millais-botanical precision — Kawachi Fuji-en most-internationally-photographed-wisteria 150-plants-20-varieties, Ashikaga Flower Park CNN-top-10-spectacular 144-year-old-most-ancient-single-wisteria, Millais 'Ophelia' Tate-Britain most-precisely-50-botanical-species-documented. Japanese botanical garden and Pre-Raphaelite heritage brands and any organization wanting the most specifically wisteria-botanical and the most precisely Japanese-horticultural green-and-violet benefits from this extraordinary Kawachi-Ashikaga-Millais triple botanical authority.
The combination's Japanese wisteria-botanical authority (Kawachi Fuji wisteria-foliage green + Wisteria floribunda violet = the most specifically Japanese-botanical-tunnel and the most internationally photographed single botanical warm-neutral-cool in Japan — simultaneously the most dramatically wisteria-tunnel-horticultural and the most Pre-Raphaelite-botanically precise green-and-violet) creates brand identity with extraordinary Japanese wisteria-botanical authority.
Brands
Industries
Green and Violet in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, green and violet creates the most specifically Japanese wisteria-botanical and the most Pre-Raphaelite-Millais warm-neutral-cool wardrobe — the combination of deep wisteria-garden green and cascading Wisteria-floribunda violet creates the dressing of the most specifically Japanese-botanical and the most precisely Pre-Raphaelite warm-neutral-cool: the deep garden-green garment with cascading violet wisteria-bloom accents, the violet dress with Kawachi Fuji deep-green botanical detail. This is the Kawachi Fuji wisteria wardrobe — garden-foliage deep green against Wisteria-floribunda tunnel violet.
Interior design with green and violet creates the most specifically Kawachi Fuji wisteria-botanical and the most Pre-Raphaelite-Millais domestic environment — green in wisteria-garden botanical living surfaces, deep botanical-green living walls, and Kawachi Fuji garden-foliage green accents against violet in Wisteria-floribunda-inspired cascading violet textile elements, Pre-Raphaelite-botanical violet accent pieces, and the most specifically wisteria-spectral violet surfaces creates the most specifically Kawachi-Fuji-wisteria and the most Pre-Raphaelite-Millais-botanical interior.
In the Kawachi Fuji Garden, Ashikaga Flower Park, and Tate Britain Pre-Raphaelite Millais heritage brand tradition, the green-and-violet combination creates the most specifically Japanese-wisteria-botanical and the most precisely Pre-Raphaelite-Millais warm-neutral-cool.
Green and Violet — Each Color Separately
Green
#008000
Green — the Kawachi Fuji wisteria garden green. The most specifically Kitakyushu-botanical and the most dramatically wisteria-canopy warm-neutral in Japanese ornamental horticulture.
Explore Green →Violet
#7F00FF
Violet — the Wisteria floribunda botanical violet. The most specifically Japanese wisteria-spectral and the most botanically Fuji-garden-precise cool.
Explore Violet →Green and Violet — FAQ
- Do green and violet go together?
- Yes — green and violet create the Kawachi Fuji Japanese wisteria-tunnel combination: Kawachi Fuji-en (2-2-48 Kawachi, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka, 150+ wisteria plants of 20 varieties, tunnels approximately 100 metres) is the most internationally photographed single wisteria garden in the world. Ashikaga Flower Park's 144-year-old Wisteria floribunda 'Multijuga' (1,990 m²) was listed by CNN as one of the 10 most spectacular gardens in the world. Millais' 'Ophelia' (Tate Britain, 1851–52) documents more than 50 individually identifiable botanical species in deep green and violet.
- What does green and violet mean?
- Green and violet together mean Kawachi Fuji Japanese wisteria-botanical depth — Kawachi Fuji-en most-internationally-photographed-wisteria 150-plants-20-varieties, Ashikaga Flower Park CNN-top-10 144-year-old-ancient-wisteria, Tate Britain Millais 'Ophelia' most-precisely-50-botanical-species, and the general meaning of wisteria-garden-foliage green (the most specifically Kawachi-Fuji-botanical warm-neutral) against Wisteria-floribunda cascading violet (the most specifically Japanese-wisteria-spectral and the most dramatically tunnel-horticultural cool) in the most specifically wisteria-botanical green-and-violet.
- How does green and violet compare to green and purple?
- Violet (#7F00FF) is blue-dominant spectral violet — Wisteria floribunda Japanese botanical, Pre-Raphaelite Millais, spectrally pure. Purple (#800080) is equally red-and-blue balanced — Mardi Gras Rex Krewe justice, Edinburgh Fringe, carnivalesque-institutional. Green-and-violet is the Kawachi Fuji Japanese wisteria-botanical (spectrally botanical, Japanese horticultural, Pre-Raphaelite); green-and-purple is the Mardi Gras Rex Krewe carnival (institutionally carnival, New Orleans traditional, Edinburgh arts-festival). Violet is the wisteria raceme; purple is the Rex Krewe Carnival.
- What accent colors work with green and violet?
- White adds the most naturally clean wisteria-purity. Pale lavender adds the most botanically graduated wisteria complement. Deep forest green adds Kawachi Fuji botanical depth. Gold adds the most specifically Japanese-garden metallic-lantern complement. Pale cream adds the most naturally domestic wisteria-garden warmth. Deep navy adds the most dramatically Meiji-era Japanese garden contrast. Most powerful in the Kawachi Fuji wisteria vocabulary: garden-foliage deep green, Wisteria floribunda violet, white, pale lavender, gold Japanese-lantern, and the specific most-internationally-wisteria-photographed and the most precisely Japanese-botanical-tunnel warm-neutral-cool of the most celebrated wisteria garden in Japan.