Lime
#32CD32
Cerulean
#007BA7
Lime & Cerulean
Lime and Cerulean Color Combination — Meaning and HEX
ComplementaryLime and Cerulean Color Combination Meaning
Hockney A Bigger Splash 1967 pairs single palm vivid athletic warm with flatly-applied pool aquatic cool — defining California poolside complement.
Tate Modern collection and Beverly Hills Hotel pool export same palm beside reflected water at gallery and celebrity scale.
Lime and Cerulean Go Together?
Yes — lime and cerulean go together as palm vivid linen against pool aquatic cool. First hit is Beverly Hills poolside — brighter than lime-navy Roland Garros, built for Hockney Tate Pink Palace. Cerulean owns the shorts and aquatic tile; lime is the linen and splash print so the mix says warm lounger California. Picture a summer pool lunch, a Hockney terrace, or a Wimbledon look only with different frame. California leisure brands lean on this duo for splash energy. Let cerulean hold the pool field — equal blocks can fight. California: strong for Hockney and Pink Palace, weak for sport.
Lime and Cerulean in Design
Strong for David Hockney Foundation, Tate Modern Bankside, Beverly Hills Hotel Pink Palace, California pool culture brands. Warm institutional neutral third sells diving board.
Poor for GBR reef and Lacoste polo. My view: palm vivid accent on pool aquatic cool mass.
Lime and Cerulean Color Style
Hockney-poolside — Tate not tennis court. The mood is palm beside flat pool cool. It likes splash and celebrity terrace.
Not coral reef, not piqué polo. Think two weeks on water. Shallow reef vivid neighbor feels GBR.
Lime and Cerulean in Branding
Fits David Hockney Foundation A Bigger Splash heritage, Tate Modern Hockney collection Bankside, Beverly Hills Hotel Pink Palace, Hockney California poolside art, California luxury pool-culture brands. The tone is Southern California poolside painterly.
Skip Lacoste without pool photo. Vivid athletic warm should feel single palm; aquatic cool should feel flatly-applied pool.
Brands
Industries
Lime and Cerulean in Fashion & Interior
At home, splash art print, aquatic pool tile, palm botanical pot — California salon. Full vivid walls feel nursery.
Fashion: palm vivid accent on aquatic cool base; poolside grammar wearable.
Lime and Cerulean — Each Color Separately
Lime
#32CD32
Lime — the David Hockney 'A Bigger Splash' Palm Tree lime. The most specifically Hockney-1967-California-poolside and the most precisely Beverly-Hills-garden-palm warm.
Explore Lime →Cerulean
#007BA7
Cerulean — the David Hockney 'A Bigger Splash' pool cerulean. The most specifically Hockney-1967-poolside-diving and the most precisely Beverly-Hills-private-pool cool.
Explore Cerulean →Color Trios with Lime & Cerulean
Add a third color to lime and cerulean — three-color palettes that build on this combination.
Lime and Cerulean — FAQ
- Hockney A Bigger Splash 1967 — why this pair?
- Single palm vivid athletic warm beside flatly-applied pool aquatic cool — most reproduced California poolside complement in British art.
- Tate Modern collection — related?
- Two hundred forty-two centimetre canvas validates palm-on-pool at five million annual visitor scale.
- Beverly Hills Hotel pool — same grammar?
- Pink Palace celebrity terrace exports palm vivid beside pool cool at most photographed Hollywood poolside.
- Lime-and-teal GBR neighbor — when pick?
- Queensland reef depth; aquatic cool here is Beverly Hills pool not Coral Sea channel.
- Warm institutional neutral third — why?
- Diving board and terrace — completes poolside palette without new hue.
Lime and Cerulean Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Lime and Cerulean color palette iframe on your site, docs, Notion, or CMS. Free HEX palette widget for developers — copy the iframe code below and drop it into any HTML page.
<iframe
src="https://colorlab.design/widget/pair/lime-and-cerulean"
width="420"
height="200"
frameborder="0"
loading="lazy"
style="border:0;border-radius:12px;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%"
title="Lime and Cerulean color combination palette iframe — free embed widget by ColorLab"
></iframe>Free Lime and Cerulean palette iframe for blogs, design systems, and developer docs. The widget links back to ColorLab — that's all we ask.