Crimson
#DC143C
Burgundy
#800020
Olive
#808000
Crimson & Burgundy & Olive
Crimson, Burgundy and Olive Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
ComplementaryCrimson, Burgundy and Olive Color Meaning
Olive and Burgundy share a muted, desaturated quality — both are 'earthed' colors where gray or dark has been added to reduce the pure chromatic intensity. Olive is muted yellow-green; Burgundy is muted dark red. Crimson is the only fully vivid element — standing between two muted earthy colors as the single point of maximum chromatic energy. The palette reads as ancient, military, and organic — the three colors of dried blood (Crimson), old wine (Burgundy), and dusty battlefield earth (Olive).
The palette is the visual world of the Roman legionary battlefield — the most organized and most successful military force in ancient European history, and the tradition from which all subsequent Western military organization derives. Roman legionaries wore deep crimson-red tunics (the specific Roman military red, 'sacramentum,' derived from either madder root or indigo-and-madder combination), carried the deep burgundy-dark of their leather equipment (shield covers, sandal straps, and belts aged to a dark wine-red), and fought across the olive-drab landscapes of Southern Europe and North Africa. The specific combination of Roman soldier crimson tunics against dark weathered leather and against the olive-brown landscape of the Mediterranean world creates exactly this palette.
Do Crimson, Burgundy and Olive Go Together?
Yes — crimson, burgundy and olive go together as legionary march earth — tunic cool-red, weathered leather dark, and Mediterranean scrub olive in one campaign field. First hit is via-appia cohesion — cooler than red-burgundy-olive autumn-table, built for food and outdoor craft. Olive and burgundy share earthy warmth; crimson reads as madder pulse so the mix stays in one physical world with Roman weight. Think an olive-oil bottle beside wine, a farm table with grove cloth, or autumn packaging that feels landscape-true and legion-honest. Food and craft brands lean on this triad for earthy appetite with march history. Keep olive as the large field — flood crimson and it turns military costume. Via Appia: strong for Mediterranean food and autumn, weak for neon nightlife.
Crimson, Burgundy and Olive in Design
Two muted earthy tones (Burgundy's dark-earthy red, Olive's dusty yellow-green) against one vivid element (Crimson) creates a palette where the vivid element appears to glow against the surrounding earthiness. Crimson as the sole vivid point against two desaturated earthed colors creates a 'fire in earth' quality — maximum vivid warmth surrounded by earthy muted context.
Crimson, Burgundy and Olive Color Style
Roman legionary battlefield and ancient military tradition — deep Burgundy weathered-leather dark weight, vivid Crimson legionary-tunic passionate energy, and Olive Mediterranean-landscape dusty earth. The palette of the most organizationally sophisticated military force in ancient European history.
Crimson, Burgundy and Olive in Branding
Heritage military and historical brands with the ancient warrior palette, premium outdoor and survival brands with the field-tested earthy-red system, artisanal leather goods brands with the aged-leather dark-red and olive combination, premium Italian heritage brands referencing Roman antiquity, and any brand communicating ancient earned authority and battle-tested endurance — deep Burgundy weathered-leather weight, vivid Crimson legionary passion, and Olive Mediterranean earth — use Crimson-Burgundy-Olive.
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Industries
Crimson, Burgundy and Olive in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Crimson-Burgundy-Olive is the Roman military and Mediterranean ancient heritage palette — deep Burgundy weathered leather dark weight, vivid Crimson legionary tunic passion, and Olive Mediterranean earth. In military-heritage and ancient-Mediterranean interiors, Olive as the dominant muted earthy ground, Crimson for the vivid passionate focal element, and Burgundy for the deep dark weathered accent.
Crimson, Burgundy & Olive — Each Color Separately
Crimson
#DC143C
Deep vivid red — the passionate element that creates the most vivid contrast within this earthy warm palette.
Explore Crimson →Burgundy
#800020
Very dark red — the deepest element sharing the earthy darkness of Olive's muted quality.
Explore Burgundy →Olive
#808000
Dusty yellow-green — muted and earthy, creating a vintage-organic tension with both dark Burgundy and vivid Crimson.
Explore Olive →Color Pairs Inside This Trio
Break Crimson, Burgundy and Olive into its three two-color combinations to see how each pairing works on its own.
Crimson, Burgundy and Olive — FAQ
- Do Crimson, Burgundy and Olive work together?
- Yes — Crimson as the sole vivid point against two muted earthy tones (Burgundy's dark-earthy red, Olive's dusty yellow-green) creates a 'fire in earth' quality. The ancient military heritage palette: weathered leather Burgundy, legionary crimson passion, Mediterranean olive earth.
- Why does having Crimson as the only vivid element create a specific effect?
- When one vivid color appears among multiple muted or desaturated colors, the vivid element appears to 'advance' or 'glow' — it reads as the visual focal point regardless of its actual size in the composition. Against Burgundy's muted-dark and Olive's muted-earthy, Crimson's maximum saturation creates the impression of chromatic luminosity. This 'single vivid among muted' structure (sometimes called 'simultaneous contrast with muted' or 'jewel-among-earths') is one of the most effective ways to make a single color appear maximally precious and significant.
- What's the Roman military red's specific pigment history?
- Roman military red (the specific red of Roman legionary tunics) was most likely produced from madder (Rubia tinctorum L.) — a plant cultivated across the Mediterranean since at least the Bronze Age for its root's red dyeing properties. Madder-dyed wool creates the specific cool-red of Crimson rather than the warm-orange-red of scarlet, which is why Roman military red in representations (mosaics, frescoes, sculptures with original paint traces) tends to show a deep, somewhat cooled red rather than an orange-red. This distinguishes Roman military Crimson from the orange-red Scarlet that would have been more expensive and rarer in antiquity.
- How does this palette appear in Mediterranean archaeological contexts?
- The combination of deep red, dark wine, and olive-yellow-green appears throughout Mediterranean archaeological contexts: Pompeian fresco painting uses exactly this palette in the 'First Style' and 'Second Style' wall paintings, where deep wine-red walls (Pompeian red, a mixture of iron oxide and organic reds) contrast with olive-yellow architectural elements and are accented with vivid crimson decorative details. The specific Pompeian red of domestic interiors combined with the olive-green-to-yellow of exterior stucco and the crimson of decorative fresco accents creates the most authentic ancient Roman domestic color experience.
- What proportion creates the most Roman military quality?
- Olive dominant (45%) as the dusty Mediterranean-landscape earthy ground; Crimson at 35% as the vivid legionary-tunic passionate primary; Burgundy at 20% as the dark weathered-leather accent. Olive's dominance creates the field-campaign quality — the vast olive-green Mediterranean landscape as the dominant reality of the Roman military experience, with vivid crimson legionary identity as the most memorable visual accent and dark leather as the formal equipment accent.
Crimson, Burgundy and Olive Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Crimson, Burgundy and Olive 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
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width="420"
height="200"
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loading="lazy"
style="border:0;border-radius:12px;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%"
title="Crimson, Burgundy and Olive color trio palette iframe — free embed widget by ColorLab"
></iframe>Free Crimson, Burgundy and Olive palette iframe for blogs, design systems, and developer docs. The widget links back to ColorLab — that's all we ask.