Lemon
#FFF44F
Emerald
#50C878
Lemon & Emerald
Lemon and Emerald Color Combination — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
ComplementaryLemon and Emerald Color Meaning
Lemon and emerald creates the Harry Winston fine jewelry combination — because Harry Winston Inc. (Harry Winston, 718 Fifth Avenue at 56th Street, New York, NY, founded 1932 by Harry Winston, 1896–1978, the most celebrated diamond and precious-stone jeweler in America, the 'King of Diamonds', whose collection of historic diamonds included the Hope Diamond, the Jonker Diamond, and over 200 other historically significant diamonds) specifically uses the combination of pale lemon-yellow diamond light (the specific spectral brilliance of the D-colour / colourless diamond, which refracts white light into its constituent spectrum with the brightest and most specifically lemon-bright fire in the highest-quality diamond stones) and Colombian emerald green (the most geologically precious and the most specifically Colombian Muzo-mine emerald green, the deepest and most vivid naturally occurring green in the gem world, called 'Colombian green' or 'Muzo green' in the trade) as the most specifically fine jewelry and the most precisely high-value precious-stone warm-cool.
The Colombian Muzo emerald mine (Minas de Muzo, Western Boyacá, Colombia, the most historically celebrated single emerald source in the world, producing the Muzo-type Colombian emeralds — characterized by the most vivid and the most specifically Colombian emerald green, caused by the trace element chromium and the most characteristic inclusions called 'jardín' / garden — sought by Harry Winston, Cartier, and the most important fine jewelry houses as the highest-value natural emerald material since the Spanish conquest in the 16th century) creates the lemon-and-emerald warm-cool at the most geologically precious and the most specifically Colombian-mine emerald scale.
The tropical butterfly species of the Heliconiidae family — specifically the Heliconius charithonia (zebra longwing, the Florida state butterfly) and the most brilliant tropical Lepidoptera that combine lemon-yellow wing markings against emerald-green tropical botanical backgrounds — creates the lemon-and-emerald warm-cool at the most biologically natural and the most specifically tropical-ecology warm-cool scale, appearing across the tropical Americas from the Amazon basin through Central America to the most specifically Colombian and Ecuadorian biodiversity hotspot ecosystems.
Lemon and Emerald in Design
Lemon and emerald in design creates the most specifically Harry Winston fine jewelry and the most geologically precious warm-cool — the Harry Winston diamond-fire-lemon-and-Muzo-emerald-green most-prestigious-New-York-fine-jewelry warm-cool, Colombian Muzo mine most-geologically-precious natural warm-cool, the most brilliance-maximizing and the most precious-stone-specific warm-cool. For fine jewelry brands, Colombian gemological heritage organizations, and any design context where the most specifically precious-stone-bright and the most geologically valuable warm-cool is needed, this creates the most precisely calibrated and the most specifically fine-jewelry warm-cool identity.
The combination's precious-stone luminosity (lemon's pale-vivid maximum-brightness refracts through the diamond facets as the most brilliance-maximizing lemon-fire, and emerald's deep Colombian-mine green creates the most vivid precious-stone cool — together creating the most geologically precious and the most brilliance-specifically fine-jewelry warm-cool) gives it an unusual material luxury authority rooted in the most valuable natural gem materials.
In contemporary fine jewelry brand design, Colombian gemological heritage, and luxury precious material brand design, the lemon-and-emerald combination creates the most specifically Harry Winston-fine-jewelry and the most geologically precious warm-cool identity.
Lemon and Emerald Color Style
Lemon and emerald define the visual character of the Harry Winston Fifth Avenue salon and the Colombian Muzo emerald mine — the pale lemon of the diamond brilliance fire against the deep emerald of the Colombian Muzo mine, the Harry Winston 718 Fifth Avenue precious-stone warm-cool. Pale precious lemon diamond-fire against the most geologically valuable Colombian emerald green.
The mood is of New York Fifth Avenue fine jewelry — the specific quality of the Harry Winston salon, where the pale lemon of the highest-quality diamond brilliance and the vivid emerald of the most geologically precious Colombian stone create the most specifically fine-jewelry and the most materially precious warm-cool in American jewelry heritage. Lemon and emerald is the palette of the most specifically Harry-Winston-fine-jewelry and the most Muzo-Colombian-precious warm-cool.
Contemporary applications include Harry Winston fine jewelry heritage, Cartier Colombian emerald collection, Muzo emerald mine Colombian heritage, and any brand wanting the most specifically fine-jewelry precious-stone and the most Muzo-Colombian-geologically valuable warm-cool combination.
What Lemon and Emerald Mean Together
Harry Winston's Hope Diamond acquisition (Harry Winston purchased the Hope Diamond — the most famous single diamond in the world, 45.52 carats, deep blue, the most historically significant diamond in gemological history — from Evalyn Walsh McLean's estate in 1949 and donated it to the Smithsonian Institution in 1958, while simultaneously assembling the most comprehensive collection of Colombian emeralds and diamond-and-emerald jewelry sets in American fine jewelry history) — creating the lemon-and-emerald warm-cool at the most historically significant and the most specifically American fine-jewelry geologically-precious scale.
The Colombian National Emerald Federation (Federación Nacional de Esmeraldistas de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia, the governing body of the Colombian emerald trade, which produces approximately 70–90% of the world's fine emeralds by value, with the Muzo, Chivor, and Coscuez mines of Western Boyacá generating the most geologically precious and the most specifically Colombian Muzo-green emeralds in the world at values of up to USD 50,000 per carat for the finest stones) — creates the lemon-and-emerald warm-cool at the most geologically precious and the most commercially globally significant emerald warm-cool scale.
The Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History gem collection (National Mall, Washington, D.C., the most comprehensive publicly accessible gem and mineral collection in the United States, including the Hope Diamond, the Dom Pedro aquamarine, and the most significant collection of Colombian emeralds including the 37.82-carat Patricia Emerald from Chivor and the 164.71-carat Gachala Emerald from Eastern Boyacá — creating the lemon-and-emerald warm-cool at the most publicly accessible and the most geologically comprehensive American gem museum scale).
Lemon and Emerald in Branding
Lemon and emerald branding projects Harry Winston fine jewelry diamond-fire and Colombian Muzo emerald geological precision — Harry Winston 718 Fifth Avenue diamond-lemon-and-Colombian-emerald most-prestigious-American-jewelry, Colombian National Emerald Federation 70–90%-world-fine-emerald most-geologically-precious warm-cool, Smithsonian National Museum most-publicly-accessible gem collection. Fine jewelry brands and any organization wanting the most specifically precious-stone and the most geologically valuable warm-cool benefits from this extraordinary Harry-Winston-Colombian triple authority.
The combination's geologically precious authority (diamond lemon-fire D-colour maximum-brilliance + Colombian Muzo emerald maximum-vivid-green = the most geologically precisely precious and the most brilliance-maximizing warm-cool in fine jewelry) creates brand identity with the most materially specific and the most geologically precious warm-cool authority.
Brands
Industries
Lemon and Emerald in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, lemon and emerald creates the most specifically Harry Winston fine jewelry and the most Colombian-precious warm-cool wardrobe — the combination of pale precious lemon diamond-fire and deep Colombian emerald creates the dressing of the most specifically fine-jewelry and the most geologically precious warm-cool: the pale lemon diamond jewelry against the deep emerald garment, the emerald-green dress with pale lemon diamond-fire jewelry accents. This is the Harry Winston Fifth Avenue wardrobe — pale diamond-fire lemon against Colombian Muzo emerald.
Interior design with lemon and emerald creates the most specifically fine jewelry salon and the most Colombian-precious botanical domestic environment — pale lemon in luminous yellow accent elements, pale-lemon ceramic light objects, and the most precisely pale-precious warm accents against deep emerald in deep Colombian-mine-green walls, emerald silk textiles, and the most geologically precious emerald-green accent elements creates the most specifically fine-jewelry salon-quality interior.
In the Harry Winston fine jewelry, Colombian emerald, and luxury precious material brand tradition, the lemon-and-emerald combination creates the most specifically precious-stone-brilliant and the most geologically Colombian-valuable warm-cool.
Lemon and Emerald — Each Color Separately
Lemon
#FFF44F
Lemon — the Harry Winston diamond-and-emerald setting lemon. The most specifically New York fine jewelry and the most brilliance-maximizing warm in precious stone setting.
Explore Lemon →Emerald
#50C878
Emerald — the Colombian Muzo emerald green. The most geologically precious and the most specifically Colombian-mine cool in fine jewelry.
Explore Emerald →Lemon and Emerald — FAQ
- Do lemon and emerald go together?
- Yes — lemon and emerald create the Harry Winston fine jewelry combination: Harry Winston (718 Fifth Avenue, New York, founded 1932, the 'King of Diamonds') uses the pale lemon-brilliance of D-colour diamonds against Colombian Muzo emerald green — the most geologically precious warm-cool in fine jewelry. Colombia produces 70–90% of the world's fine emeralds by value; Muzo-mine stones can reach USD 50,000 per carat.
- What does lemon and emerald mean?
- Lemon and emerald together mean Harry Winston fine jewelry precious-stone brilliance — diamond-lemon-fire-and-Colombian-Muzo-emerald most-prestigious-American-fine-jewelry warm-cool, Colombian National Emerald Federation 70–90%-world-fine-emerald most-geologically-precious, Smithsonian NMNH Gachala Emerald 164.71-carat Colombian collection, and the general meaning of pale precious diamond-fire lemon (the most brilliance-maximizing D-colour warm) against deep Colombian Muzo emerald (the most geologically precious and the most specifically Muzo-mine vivid cool) in the most specifically fine-jewelry precious warm-cool.
- How does lemon and emerald compare to yellow and emerald?
- Lemon (#FFF44F) is pale-vivid, more cool-tinged, and more specifically diamond-fire and Harry Winston fine jewelry precious (pale brilliance-maximizing) than yellow (#FFE600). Lemon-and-emerald is the Harry Winston diamond-fire-and-Colombian-Muzo fine jewelry warm-cool (pale precious, brilliance-specific, geologically valuable); yellow-and-emerald is the Taj Mahal pietra dura and Colombian emerald (warmer-saturated, architecturally specific, Mughal historical). Lemon is the diamond fire; yellow is the Mughal stone setting.
- What accent colors work with lemon and emerald?
- Deep black adds the most dramatically fine-jewelry contrast. White adds the most luminous Colombian-salon purity. Deep forest green adds the most botanical Muzo-Colombia lushness. Pale ivory adds the most natural diamond-setting warmth. Gold adds the most specifically Harry-Winston fine-jewelry metal setting. Deep charcoal adds the most dramatically fine-jewelry graphic contrast. Most powerful in the Harry Winston fine-jewelry vocabulary: pale diamond-fire lemon, deep Colombian Muzo emerald, black velvet, white light, gold setting metal, and the specific geologically precious warm-cool of the most prestigious American fine jewelry and the most valuable Colombian precious stone tradition.