Lime
#32CD32
Purple
#800080
Lime & Purple
Lime and Purple Color Combination — Meaning and HEX
ComplementaryLime and Purple Color Combination Meaning
Joker Batman number one 1940 pairs acid vivid athletic warm with signature suit deep cool — defining Gotham theatrical villain complement.
Edinburgh Festival Fringe and Carnaval de Olinda export same theatrical vivid beside performance cool at arts and carnival scale.
Lime and Purple Go Together?
Yes — lime and purple go together as acid vivid jacket with deep theatrical scarf. First feel is Comic-Con convention loft — louder than lime-cerulean Hockney pool, built for Joker Fringe Olinda. Purple is the scarf and dark sofa; lime is the jacket and comic print so the mix says theatrical night. Think a Comic-Con evening, a Fringe loft, or a Monteverde ecotour look only with different frame. Theatrical brands lean on this pair for stage voltage. One hue must lead — equal fields tip into forest costume. Theatrical: strong for Joker and Fringe, weak for forest.
Lime and Purple in Design
Strong for DC Comics Batman Joker heritage, Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society, Carnaval de Olinda Pernambuco, performing arts brands. Absolute dark third sells Gotham night.
Poor for Fillmore Day-Glo and Valensole lavender. My view: acid vivid accent on suit deep cool mass.
Lime and Purple Color Style
Joker-Gotham — Batman not Fillmore poster. The mood is acid vivid beside theatrical suit cool. It likes villain and Fringe stage.
Not blacklight UV, not Provence harvest. Think Bob Kane 1940. Spectral UV neighbor feels Fillmore.
Lime and Purple in Branding
Fits DC Comics Batman franchise Joker heritage, Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society, Carnaval de Olinda Pernambuco Brazil, performing arts theatrical identity, American superhero comics pop-culture brands. The tone is Gotham theatrical villain spectacle.
Skip Fillmore without comic photo. Acid vivid warm should feel Joker hair; deep cool should feel signature suit.
Brands
Industries
Lime and Purple in Fashion & Interior
At home, comic art print, deep theatrical throw, absolute dark rug — Gotham salon. Full vivid walls feel carnival.
Fashion: acid vivid on deep theatrical base; convention night grammar wearable.
Lime and Purple — Each Color Separately
Lime
#32CD32
Lime — the Joker / Batman DC Comics lime-green. The most specifically DC-Comics-Joker and the most precisely Gotham-City-villain-contrast warm.
Explore Lime →Purple
#800080
Purple — the Joker / Batman DC Comics purple. The most specifically DC-Joker-suit and the most precisely Gotham-theatrical-villain cool.
Explore Purple →Color Trios with Lime & Purple
Add a third color to lime and purple — three-color palettes that build on this combination.
Lime and Purple — FAQ
- Joker Batman 1940 — why this pair?
- Bob Kane Bill Finger Jerry Robinson pairs acid vivid athletic warm with signature suit deep cool — most recognized villain complement in American comics.
- Edinburgh Festival Fringe — related?
- Four thousand shows export theatrical vivid beside performance deep cool at three million ticket scale.
- Carnaval de Olinda — same arc?
- Pernambuco UNESCO town pairs northeastern carnival vivid with theatrical deep cool at folk performance scale.
- Lime-and-violet Fillmore neighbor — when pick?
- Day-Glo blacklight psychedelic; deep cool here is Joker suit not UV violet.
- Absolute dark third — why?
- Gotham night ground — lets acid vivid and suit deep cool read villain not garden.
Lime and Purple Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Lime and Purple 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-purple"
width="420"
height="200"
frameborder="0"
loading="lazy"
style="border:0;border-radius:12px;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%"
title="Lime and Purple color combination palette iframe — free embed widget by ColorLab"
></iframe>Free Lime and Purple palette iframe for blogs, design systems, and developer docs. The widget links back to ColorLab — that's all we ask.