Lime
#32CD32
Rose
#FF007F
Lime & Rose
Lime and Rose Color Combination — Meaning and HEX
ComplementaryLime and Rose Color Combination Meaning
This pair feels like a flower show in full bloom — one tone is leafy and bright, the other is a deep floral punch. Together they read as romantic but awake, not dusty or old-fashioned. The contrast is bold enough to feel intentional.
You find it in garden brands, florist packaging, fashion editorials, and spring campaigns. Designers use it when they want romance with energy, not soft pastel only.
Lime and Rose Go Together?
Yes — lime and rose go together as vivid jacket heat over deep floral dress. First feel is evening garden event — more dramatic than lime-magenta Pop Art loft, built for Valentine's wedding season. Rose owns the floral dress and strong accessory; lime is the jacket and bright shirt so the mix says romantic lively creative. Picture a late-spring date, an early-summer wedding, or creative work that wants bloom with voltage. Romantic event brands lean on this duo for lively warmth. Keep lime as jacket flash — equal fields tip into office costume. Romantic lively: strong for events and dates, weak for quiet errands.
Lime and Rose in Design
Strong for florists, garden centers, beauty launches, and lifestyle magazines that need color with personality. It works well in markets that already love garden culture — the UK, parts of Europe, and US lifestyle retail. Let one tone clearly lead; equal blocks can vibrate.
It is a weak fit for corporate software, banks, or minimal tech — too floral and loud for those spaces. My take: excellent for seasonal and beauty work; risky for serious B2B. White space is your friend so the pair can breathe.
Lime and Rose Color Style
Bold, floral, and a little theatrical. The mix sits between garden party and fashion week — alive on one side, romantic on the other. It feels curated, not accidental.
Not quiet minimalism, not earthy farmhouse. Think prize bloom, not barn wood. To push it modern, use more of the leafy tone as ground and the deep pink as a deliberate accent.
Lime and Rose in Branding
Fits florists, garden brands, beauty labels, and fashion houses that want romance with snap. The mood is expressive, seasonal, and a little glamorous.
Skip industrial tools, logistics, and anything that must feel neutral. Names stay in Brands; here the promise is bloom and energy, not calm efficiency.
Brands
Industries
Lime and Rose in Fashion & Interior
At home this suits a dining nook, a powder room, or a creative studio. Use the leafy tone on a larger surface and the deep pink in art, flowers, or one chair. Full walls of both can feel like a costume set.
In clothes, one strong piece with a quieter partner keeps it wearable. Peak in spring and early summer; in winter, keep the deep pink as lipstick, a bag, or a scarf so it stays elegant.
Lime and Rose — Each Color Separately
Color Trios with Lime & Rose
Add a third color to lime and rose — three-color palettes that build on this combination.
Lime and Rose — FAQ
- Why does this pair feel more "fashion" than "cute"?
- The deep pink is saturated, not baby-soft, and the green is sharp rather than pastel. That combination reads as intentional and editorial — closer to a runway look than a nursery palette.
- How do I use it without the colors fighting?
- Pick a leader. If both cover the same amount of space, they can vibrate and tire the eye. Give one tone about seventy percent of the layout and the other the rest as accent.
- Is this too loud for a wedding brand?
- Not if the leafy tone leads and the deep pink is limited to details — invitations, ribbons, one floral hit. Full equal blocks can feel party-store; imbalance keeps it romantic.
- What neutrals support this duo best?
- Cream and soft white open it up. Warm gray can work in small doses. Cool blue-gray often makes the pink look harsh, so prefer warm neutrals.
- Can this work year-round in branding?
- Yes for florists and beauty, where bloom is always on-brand. For general lifestyle brands, lean on it for spring campaigns and use quieter neutrals the rest of the year.
Lime and Rose Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Lime and Rose 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-rose"
width="420"
height="200"
frameborder="0"
loading="lazy"
style="border:0;border-radius:12px;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%"
title="Lime and Rose color combination palette iframe — free embed widget by ColorLab"
></iframe>Free Lime and Rose palette iframe for blogs, design systems, and developer docs. The widget links back to ColorLab — that's all we ask.