Lime
#32CD32
White
#FFFFFF
Lime & White
Lime and White Color Combination — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
ClassicLime and White Color Meaning
Lime and white creates the Wimbledon Championships Centre Court lawn and all-white dress-code tradition — because the Wimbledon Championships all-white dress code (The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Church Road, Wimbledon SW19 5AE — the most specific and the most strictly enforced single dress-code rule in professional tennis, requiring all players to wear predominantly white clothing on all courts, enforced since the late 19th century and most rigorously since 2014 when the AELTC dress code was updated to require clothing that is 'almost entirely white' — the most specifically AELTC-dress-code-white and the most broadly globally-sports-dress-code-recognized single clothing requirement in the history of professional tennis) creates the most specifically Wimbledon-dress-code and the most precisely Centre-Court-white-tradition warm-cool through the combination of the vivid lime-green of the Wimbledon Centre Court grass (the most specifically AELTC-Centre-Court-lawn-lime and the most broadly globally-Grand-Slam-grass-recognized warm) and the brilliant white of the Wimbledon players' dress code (the most specifically AELTC-all-white-dress-code and the most precisely Wimbledon-players-white — the most specifically and the most globally-sports-dress-code-recognized single clothing-all-white rule in the history of professional sport, contrasting with the vivid lime of the Centre Court Perennial Ryegrass lawn in the most dramatically legible lime-and-white warm-cool on any Grand Slam court).
The Nigeria national flag tradition (Federal Republic of Nigeria, Federal Capital Territory, Abuja — the most specifically Nigerian-nationally-symbolically and the most broadly internationally-African-flag-recognized single bicolour in Africa, the Nigerian national flag — three equal vertical bands of lime-green, white, and lime-green, adopted 15 September 1960, designed by Michael Taiwo Akinkunmi at an international flag design competition, the most specifically Nigerian-national-independence-1960 and the most broadly internationally-African-flag-recognized lime-and-white warm-cool) creates the lime-and-white warm-cool at the most specifically Nigeria-national-1960 and the most broadly internationally-African-nation-recognized warm-cool scale.
The Pakistan national flag tradition (Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Islamabad — the most specifically Pakistani-nationally-symbolically and the most precisely South-Asian-national-flag-recognized, the Pakistani national flag — white vertical band at the hoist side and lime-green to the fly with white crescent-and-star — adopted 11 August 1947 on independence, designed based on the All India Muslim League flag — the most specifically Pakistan-national-independence-1947 and the most broadly internationally-South-Asian-flag-recognized lime-and-white warm-cool) creates the lime-and-white warm-cool at the most specifically Pakistan-national-1947 and the most broadly internationally-South-Asian-flag warm-cool scale.
Lime and White in Design
Lime and white in design creates the most specifically Wimbledon Championships AELTC-all-white-dress-code and the most Centre-Court-lawn-lime warm-cool — Wimbledon AELTC 1877-oldest-Grand-Slam most-specifically-all-white-dress-code, Nigeria national flag 1960-independence most-specifically-Nigerian-nationally, Pakistan national flag 1947-independence most-specifically-South-Asian-nationally. For Wimbledon AELTC heritage brands, West African national heritage, and any design context where the most specifically lawn-tennis-all-white-dress-code and the most precisely Centre-Court-lime-lawn warm-cool is needed, this creates the most precisely calibrated and the most AELTC-Wimbledon-authentic warm-cool identity.
The combination's Wimbledon dress-code authority (Centre-Court-lime's most-specifically-AELTC-lawn-green warm against AELTC-all-white's most-precisely-Wimbledon-dress-code creates the most specifically Wimbledon-Championship-lawn-and-dress-code and the most broadly globally-Grand-Slam-recognized warm-cool — simultaneously the most specifically AELTC-1877-oldest-Grand-Slam and the most broadly globally-sports-dress-code-recognized single lime-and-white tradition in professional sport) gives it an unusual Wimbledon dress-code-and-lawn global authority.
In contemporary Wimbledon AELTC heritage, Nigerian national flag heritage, and Pakistani national flag heritage, the lime-and-white combination creates the most specifically Wimbledon-all-white-dress-code and the most precisely Centre-Court-lawn warm-cool identity.
Lime and White Color Style
Lime and white define the visual character of the Wimbledon Centre Court lawn and the all-white dress code — the vivid lime-green of the AELTC Centre Court Perennial Ryegrass against the brilliant white of the Wimbledon players' dress code, the Nigerian flag three-band lime-white-lime, the Pakistani flag lime-green-and-white. AELTC-Centre-Court vivid lime against AELTC-all-white brilliant white.
The mood is of Wimbledon Championships SW19 clarity — the specific quality of the AELTC Centre Court in July, where the vivid lime-green of the lawn and the brilliant white of the players' dress code create the most specifically AELTC-Wimbledon-all-white-dress-code-lawn and the most broadly globally-Grand-Slam warm-cool. Lime and white is the palette of the most specifically Wimbledon-AELTC-all-white-rule and the most Nigerian/Pakistani-national-flag-1960/1947 warm-cool.
Contemporary applications include Wimbledon AELTC heritage, Nigerian national heritage, Pakistani national heritage, and any brand wanting the most specifically AELTC-all-white-dress-code and the most Centre-Court-lawn-lime warm-cool combination.
What Lime and White Mean Together
Wimbledon all-white dress code (The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Church Road, Wimbledon SW19 5AE — the most rigorously enforced all-white dress code in professional tennis, requiring 'almost entirely white' clothing since 2014, the most specifically AELTC-dress-code and the most broadly globally-sports-dress-code-recognized single clothing rule in the history of professional sport, creating the most specifically Wimbledon-lime-Centre-Court-lawn against AELTC-all-white warm-cool) — creates the lime-and-white warm-cool at the most specifically AELTC-all-white-dress-code and the most broadly globally-sports-dress-code-recognized warm-cool scale.
Nigeria national flag (Flag of Nigeria, adopted 1 October 1960, Independence Day — three equal vertical bands of lime-green, white, lime-green, designed by Michael Taiwo Akinkunmi, a student at University College London at the time of the 1959 flag design competition — the most specifically Nigerian-national-independence-1960-Akinkunmi and the most broadly internationally-West-African-flag-recognized lime-and-white warm-cool, the most specifically Nigerian-nationally-symbolic and the most precisely Nigerian-independence-day-1960 national flag warm-cool) — creates the lime-and-white warm-cool at the most specifically Nigeria-national-1960 and the most broadly internationally-West-African warm-cool scale.
Pakistan national flag (Flag of Pakistan, adopted 11 August 1947, Independence Day — dark green / lime-green fly with white crescent moon and five-pointed star, plus white vertical stripe at the hoist — designed based on the All India Muslim League flag, the most specifically Pakistan-national-independence-1947 and the most broadly internationally-South-Asian-Islamic-flag-recognized lime-and-white warm-cool, the most specifically Pakistani-nationally-symbolic and the most precisely Pakistani-independence-1947 national flag warm-cool) — creates the lime-and-white warm-cool at the most specifically Pakistan-national-1947 and the most broadly internationally-South-Asian warm-cool scale.
Lime and White in Branding
Lime and white branding projects Wimbledon AELTC all-white-dress-code and Centre-Court-lawn authority — Wimbledon AELTC 1877-oldest-Grand-Slam most-specifically-all-white-dress-code, Nigeria national flag 1960-independence most-specifically-Nigerian-nationally, Pakistan national flag 1947-independence most-specifically-South-Asian. Wimbledon and national-flag heritage brands benefit from this extraordinary AELTC-Nigeria-Pakistan triple lime-and-white authority.
The combination's Wimbledon-and-national-flag authority (Centre-Court-lime + AELTC-all-white = the most specifically Wimbledon-Championship-1877-oldest-Grand-Slam and the most broadly globally-sports-dress-code-recognized warm-cool) creates brand identity with extraordinary Wimbledon and Nigerian/Pakistani national-flag authority.
Brands
Industries
Lime and White in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, lime and white creates the most specifically Wimbledon AELTC all-white-dress-code and the most Centre-Court-lawn warm-cool wardrobe — the AELTC-Centre-Court vivid-lime garment with Wimbledon-all-white accents, the white dress with Centre-Court-lawn-lime detail. This is the Wimbledon dress-code wardrobe — lawn vivid lime against AELTC-all-white brilliant white.
Interior design with lime and white creates the most specifically Wimbledon-Centre-Court and the most AELTC-all-white domestic environment — lime in Centre-Court-lawn-inspired vivid-lime surfaces, Wimbledon-lawn lime accents against white in AELTC-all-white-dress-code-inspired brilliant-white surfaces, Nigerian/Pakistani-flag-white elements creates the most specifically Wimbledon-AELTC interior.
In the Wimbledon AELTC, Nigeria national flag, and Pakistan national flag heritage tradition, lime-and-white creates the most specifically Wimbledon-all-white-dress-code-lawn warm-cool.
Lime and White — Each Color Separately
Lime
#32CD32
Lime — the Wimbledon dress-code-lawn lime. The most specifically All-England-Club-dress-code and the most precisely Centre-Court-lawn-white-tradition warm.
Explore Lime →White
#FFFFFF
White — the Wimbledon dress-code white. The most specifically AELTC-SW19-all-white-rule and the most precisely Wimbledon-players-dress-code cool.
Explore White →Lime and White — FAQ
- Do lime and white go together?
- Yes — lime and white create the Wimbledon Championships all-white dress code and lawn combination: the AELTC (Church Road SW19, 1877 oldest Grand Slam) requires 'almost entirely white' clothing, contrasting with the vivid lime-green of the Perennial Ryegrass Centre Court. The Nigerian national flag (adopted 1 October 1960, designed by Michael Taiwo Akinkunmi) uses three bands of lime-green, white, lime-green. The Pakistani national flag (adopted 11 August 1947) uses lime-green and white.
- What does lime and white mean?
- Lime and white together mean Wimbledon AELTC dress-code-and-lawn — AELTC most-specifically-all-white-dress-code, Nigeria 1960-independence most-specifically-Nigerian-nationally, Pakistan 1947-independence most-specifically-South-Asian, and the general meaning of Centre-Court-lawn vivid lime (the most specifically AELTC-grass warm) against AELTC-all-white brilliant white (the most specifically Wimbledon-dress-code cool) in the most specifically Wimbledon-Championships warm-cool.
- How does lime and white compare to green and white?
- Lime (#32CD32) is vivid bright-green, more specifically AELTC-Wimbledon-Centre-Court-lawn and Nigerian/Pakistani flag — Wimbledon, national flags, vivid bright. Green (#008000) is deeper mid-green, more specifically Irish-tricolour and Nigerian-flag-nuance — Irish nationally, deep-mid national flag. Lime-and-white is the Wimbledon AELTC and Nigerian/Pakistani flags (vivid bright, SW19-Wimbledon-AELTC, Centre-Court-lawn); green-and-white is the Irish tricolour and Pakistani/Nigerian flag (deeper mid-green, nationally Irish, independence tricolour). Lime is the AELTC lawn; green is the Irish tricolour.
- What accent colors work with lime and white?
- Purple adds the most specifically AELTC-Wimbledon-brand-purple complement. Gold adds the most specifically Wimbledon-trophy-metallic. Sky blue adds the most specifically SW19-Wimbledon-summer-sky. Deep green adds the most specifically AELTC-deeper-lawn-botanical. Silver adds the most specifically Wimbledon-premium elevation. Cream adds the most naturally Wimbledon-domestic warmth. Most powerful in the Wimbledon vocabulary: Centre-Court vivid lime, AELTC-all-white, AELTC-brand-purple, Wimbledon-gold, SW19-sky-blue, and the specific most-AELTC-1877-oldest-Grand-Slam-globally-sports-dress-code-recognized and the most broadly Nigerian-1960-independence / Pakistani-1947-independence warm-cool.