Crimson
#DC143C
Coral
#FF7F50
Rose
#FF007F
Crimson & Coral & Rose
Crimson, Coral and Rose Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
AnalogousCrimson, Coral and Rose Color Meaning
Crimson, Coral, and Rose create a warm family that spans two distinct hue arcs: Crimson-to-Coral (warm red through warm orange-pink) and Crimson-to-Rose (warm red through vivid pink-red toward the pink-magenta zone). Coral and Rose together surround Crimson from two sides — Coral on the orange-warm side, Rose on the pink-cool side — with Crimson as the anchor between both. The palette has a vivid, comprehensive quality: all three colors are at high saturation, each is a different pink-red register, and together they cover the maximum range within the vivid warm-pink family.
The palette is the visual world of the Colombian Rose-to-Peony luxury floral market — specifically the premium cut-flower cultivation of Bogotá's Sabana that has expanded to include peony cultivation (a cooler-climate flower requiring the specific Bogotá altitude conditions). The vivid three-position warm-to-rose progression of Crimson-Coral-Rose corresponds exactly to the three most commercially significant red-family cut flowers: deep crimson roses (Rosa 'Freedom'), vivid coral roses ('Naranja,' 'Milva'), and vivid deep-rose peonies (Paeonia 'Coral Charm' — which, despite its name, is specifically vivid deep-rose to rose-red when fully open).
Do Crimson, Coral and Rose Go Together?
Yes — crimson, coral and rose go together as Bogotá cut-rose passion — Freedom cool-red bloom, Naranja coral mid, and Coral Charm peony rose in one floriculture stall. First impression is naranja-party passion — cooler than red-coral-rose garden-party, built for dates and beauty. Rose pulls passionate pink; coral pulls orange-warm; crimson holds mid so every note stays warm and vivid with Andean greenhouse weight. Think a summer beauty shelf, a date look with rose and coral accents, or a garden table that owns all warm pink notes and keeps Colombian cut-flower gravity. Beauty and romance brands lean on this triad for complete warm pink with floriculture history. Keep rose as the bright flash — flood all three and it turns costume romance. Naranja passion: strong for dates and beauty, weak for gym-ready looks.
Crimson, Coral and Rose in Design
Three vivid warm-red-family colors (Crimson cool-red, Coral tropical orange-pink, Rose vivid deep-pink-red) create the most comprehensive vivid warm-pink-red palette. Colombian luxury floriculture palette — passionate deep red, tropical warmth, and vivid rose intensity in maximum saturation.
Crimson, Coral and Rose Color Style
Colombian luxury floriculture and premium rose-to-peony cut flower tradition — deep Crimson 'Freedom'-rose passionate, vivid Coral 'Naranja'-rose tropical, and vivid Rose 'Coral Charm'-peony intense. The palette of the world's most commercially significant premium flower production.
Crimson, Coral and Rose in Branding
Premium floriculture and luxury flower industry brands with the vivid rose-family palette, luxury gifting and occasion brands with the most comprehensive vivid warm-pink-red identity, beauty brands with the most vivid and most complete warm-to-rose family, fashion brands with the maximum-saturation warm-pink coverage, and any brand communicating the most comprehensive and most vivid warm-red-to-rose palette — deep Crimson passionate, vivid Coral tropical, and vivid Rose intense deep-pink-red — use Crimson-Coral-Rose.
Brands
Industries
Crimson, Coral and Rose in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Crimson-Coral-Rose is the Colombian luxury floriculture and rose-to-peony palette — deep Crimson 'Freedom'-rose passionate, vivid Coral 'Naranja'-rose tropical, and vivid Rose 'Coral Charm'-peony intense. In luxury floral-inspired and maximally vivid warm-rose interiors, the three warm-rose colors can be used in equal proportions for maximum vivid saturation, or with Rose as the dominant primary for the most intensely rose quality.
Crimson, Coral & Rose — Each Color Separately
Crimson
#DC143C
Deep vivid red — the coolest, darkest warm in the most vivid warm-pink trilogy.
Explore Crimson →Coral
#FF7F50
Vivid warm pink-orange — the most tropical and most orange-warm element of the three.
Explore Coral →Rose
#FF007F
Vivid deep pink-red — equal maximum red and intense blue-violet, the most precise pink between crimson and magenta.
Explore Rose →Color Pairs Inside This Trio
Break Crimson, Coral and Rose into its three two-color combinations to see how each pairing works on its own.
Crimson, Coral and Rose — FAQ
- Do Crimson, Coral and Rose work together?
- Yes — comprehensive vivid warm-pink-red family: Crimson (cool-red passionate), Coral (orange-pink tropical), Rose (vivid deep-pink-red intense). Colombian floriculture: Crimson 'Freedom' passion, Coral 'Naranja' tropical, Rose 'Coral Charm' vivid intense.
- What's the 'Coral Charm' peony's dramatic color shift?
- Paeonia lactiflora 'Coral Charm' is unique among peonies for its dramatic and multi-stage color change from bud to full bloom. The bud opens at vivid coral-orange (approximately #FF7F50 — exactly Coral in our palette); as the petals unfurl over 2-3 days, the color shifts progressively toward a deeper, more saturated rose-red-pink; and at full bloom (when the flower is approximately 15-20cm diameter with 50+ petals), the color settles at approximately #FF007F — exactly Rose in our palette. This dramatic color transition from Coral bud to Rose bloom makes 'Coral Charm' the single peony variety that physically demonstrates the Crimson-Coral-Rose palette's complete arc within a single flower's lifetime.
- What's the color symbolism of Rose (#FF007F) compared to Crimson and Pink?
- Rose (#FF007F — RGB 255, 0, 127) occupies a specific position between the warm and cool sides of the pink family: it has maximum red (255), no green (0), and high but not maximum blue (127). This makes it distinctly different from Crimson (#DC143C, predominantly red with slight blue) and Pink (#FFC0CB, pale red-white). Rose is 'deep vivid pink' — more saturated than pastel pink, more pink (cool-blue influenced) than crimson, and more specifically pink than coral (which is orange-influenced). The English word 'rose' for this specific color dates to approximately 1382 (in Chaucer), making it one of the oldest color names in the English language — predating most other specific pink terms.
- How has the Colombian cut-flower industry expanded from roses to peonies?
- The Sabana de Bogotá (altitude 2,600m) was originally selected for rose cultivation because its altitude provides near-optimal growing conditions (cool nights, warm days, consistent humidity, intense UV). In the 2000s-2010s, Colombian growers began experimenting with peony cultivation (Paeonia lactiflora), which normally requires cold winters (chilling requirement of 400-500 hours below 5°C). At 2,600m, the Bogotá Sabana provides a modified version of the peony's chilling requirement, allowing year-round cultivation impossible at lower altitudes. By 2020, Colombia had become a significant peony exporter — primarily to the United States and European markets. The ability to grow both roses (warm-climate preference) and peonies (cool-climate preference) at the same altitude is unique to the Bogotá Sabana and has made Colombian floriculture uniquely comprehensive in the luxury cut-flower market.
- What proportion creates the most luxury floriculture palette quality?
- Equal thirds (33% each) creates the most complete warm-pink-red floriculture quality — giving Crimson, Coral, and Rose equal presence creates the sense of a complete flower arrangement spanning the vivid warm-pink-red family from crimson roses through coral roses to vivid rose peonies. Alternatively, Rose at 40% as the most vivid and most distinctive element, Coral at 35%, and Crimson at 25% creates the most premium-feeling arrangement — the vivid Rose as the most precious accent.
Crimson, Coral and Rose Color Palette iframe Embed
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<iframe
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