Crimson
#DC143C
Emerald
#50C878
Cobalt
#0047AB
Crimson & Emerald & Cobalt
Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
TriadicCrimson, Emerald and Cobalt Color Meaning
Emerald (vivid, luminous green) and Cobalt (deep, saturated blue) create the most intensely pigment-saturated cool duo. Both are named after specific mineral pigments — emerald after the gemstone (beryl with chromium — Cr³⁺ substituting for Al³⁺ in the beryl crystal structure), cobalt after the mineral cobaltite (CoAsS — cobalt arsenic sulfide), which was used since the medieval period as a blue pigment for glass and ceramics. Together they create the most historically significant pigment duo in European art history.
The palette is the visual world of the Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs — specifically the most celebrated eggs produced by the House of Fabergé for the Russian Imperial family between 1885 and 1917. The Fabergé palette: the deep vivid crimson-to-red of the guilloché enamel in deep crimson (specifically the 'Rosebud' egg, 1895; and the characteristic deep red-to-crimson enamel used in multiple Imperial eggs — the 'Resurrection' egg, the 'Danish Palaces' egg, and others); the vivid emerald-green guilloché enamel and the emerald stone settings (specifically the 'Emerald Snake Clock' egg, 1895, and numerous emerald-set pieces); and the deep cobalt-blue guilloché enamel (specifically the 'Colonnade' egg — cobalt blue enamel over guilloché — and multiple other eggs in Fabergé's most saturated blue palette).
Do Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt Go Together?
Yes — crimson, emerald and cobalt go together as Fabergé guilloché enamel tray — cool-red Imperial enamel flash, emerald jewel green, and cobalt deep pigment in one Easter Egg case. First feel is faberge-enamel craft — cooler than red-emerald-cobalt enamel-tray, built for art and luxury goods. Cobalt leads mineral deep blue; emerald holds jewel green; crimson drives warm lacquer so the mix feels material-true and precious with Romanov weight. Picture a ceramics label with enamel blue under emerald-crimson, a gallery poster, or a jewelry box that owns pigment and gem and keeps Fabergé gravity. Art and luxury brands lean on this triad for material primary depth with Imperial egg history. Keep cobalt as the large cool field — equal warms tip into costume drama. Fabergé tray: strong for galleries and jewelry, weak for soft pastel moods.
Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt in Design
Deep passionate Crimson, vivid jewel Emerald, and deep saturated Cobalt create the most Fabergé Imperial Easter Egg and most historically pigment-saturated triadic palette. Fabergé Imperial palette — passionate crimson guilloché enamel, vivid emerald stone, and deep cobalt guilloché enamel.
Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt Color Style
Fabergé Imperial Easter Egg and Russian Imperial Romanov court tradition — deep Crimson passionate guilloché enamel, vivid jewel Emerald stone settings, and deep saturated Cobalt guilloché enamel. The palette of the most celebrated luxury objects in the history of decorative arts and the most technically extraordinary enamelwork in the world.
Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt in Branding
Fabergé Imperial Easter Egg and Russian Imperial Romanov court brands with the most intensely pigment-saturated triadic palette, luxury jewelry and haute joaillerie Fabergé-heritage brands with the Imperial aesthetic, premium luxury Russian decorative arts and collector brands with the most naturally crimson-emerald-cobalt vocabulary, luxury auction houses and museum decorative arts brands with the most celebrated Imperial luxury tradition, and any brand communicating passionate crimson guilloché-enamel, vivid emerald stone-setting, and deep saturated cobalt guilloché — deep Crimson guilloché, vivid Emerald stone, and deep Cobalt guilloché — use Crimson-Emerald-Cobalt.
Brands
Industries
Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Crimson-Emerald-Cobalt is the Fabergé Imperial Easter Egg palette — deep Crimson passionate guilloché enamel, vivid jewel Emerald stone setting, and deep saturated Cobalt guilloché enamel. In Fabergé-inspired and most naturally Imperial Russian interiors, Cobalt as the dominant deep saturated cool anchor, Emerald for the vivid jewel secondary, and Crimson for the passionate guilloché accent.
Crimson, Emerald & Cobalt — Each Color Separately
Crimson
#DC143C
Deep vivid red — the passionate warm anchor in the most intensely saturated cool-dominated trio.
Explore Crimson →Emerald
#50C878
Vivid medium green — the most jewel-like green, luminous and pure.
Explore Emerald →Cobalt
#0047AB
Deep saturated blue — the most intensely pigmented and most structurally dense blue.
Explore Cobalt →Color Pairs Inside This Trio
Break Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt into its three two-color combinations to see how each pairing works on its own.
Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt — FAQ
- Do Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt work together?
- Yes — most intensely pigment-saturated triadic: red-green-blue family with cobalt at high saturation creating the deepest cool, emerald the most jewel-bright green, crimson the most passionate warm. Fabergé Imperial: Crimson guilloché passionate, Emerald stone vivid jewel, Cobalt guilloché deep saturated.
- What are the Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs and how many survive?
- The Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs are a series of elaborately jeweled Easter eggs created by the House of Fabergé (founded by Gustav Fabergé in Saint Petersburg in 1842; most celebrated under the direction of Peter Carl Fabergé — Gustav's son, 1846-1920) for the Russian Imperial Romanov family between 1885 and 1917. The commission: in 1885, Tsar Alexander III commissioned the first egg as an Easter gift for his wife, Empress Maria Feodorovna — a tradition that his son Nicholas II continued (giving two eggs per Easter: one to his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, and one to his wife, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna) from his accession in 1894 until the final eggs of 1917 (the last year of the Romanov dynasty). Total produced: 50 Imperial eggs were commissioned; 46 are confirmed to survive. The surprise: each egg contained a 'surprise' — a hidden object that could be revealed by opening the egg in a specific way — including miniature portraits of the Imperial family, miniature models of Imperial palaces and yachts, and working miniature mechanical objects (a miniature working Trans-Siberian Railway replica, in the 'Trans-Siberian Railway' egg of 1900). Current locations: the largest collections are held at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (5 eggs), the Fabergé Museum in Baden-Baden (9 eggs), the Fabergé Museum in Saint Petersburg (15 eggs — the Shuvalov collection), and various private collections (the Forbes family collection — 9 eggs — was sold to Viktor Vekselberg in 2004 for reportedly $90-100 million).
- What is guilloché engraving and how was it applied to Fabergé's eggs?
- Guilloché (also: engine turning, rose engine turning) is a form of ornamental lathe work in which a rotating or oscillating workpiece is moved against a cutting tool in precisely controlled, repetitive patterns, producing intricate, symmetrical engraved designs on the metal surface. The machine: the 'rose engine' (tour à guillocher — French) or 'guilloché engine' is a specialized lathe that can be configured to produce dozens of different geometric patterns by varying: (1) the eccentricity of the workpiece rotation; (2) the oscillation frequency and amplitude of the rosette cam that controls the workpiece lateral movement; (3) the depth and shape of the cutting tool. Fabergé's guilloché process: (1) the base metal (typically gold — 14-carat or 18-carat — or silver) is shaped into the form of the intended object (egg form, cigarette case, photograph frame, etc.); (2) the guilloché engine engraves the metal surface with the chosen pattern (barleycorn, wave, moiré, sunburst, etc.) at extremely fine scale — individual engraved lines may be only 0.1-0.2 mm apart, producing approximately 50-100 parallel lines per centimeter of surface; (3) the engraved surface is cleaned; (4) multiple layers of translucent enamel are applied by the émailleurs (enamel artists — Fabergé's workshops employed approximately 12-15 master enamel artists at any one time): each layer of enamel (ground glass powder mixed with a binder — oil of lavender or pine resin — applied with a brush or spatula) is fired at approximately 800-900°C in a small kiln; between each firing the enamel is ground flat and polished before the next layer is applied; (5) the finished enamel surface is polished to a high mirror finish using progressively finer abrasives.
- What is the history of cobalt as a pigment?
- Cobalt-based blue pigments are among the oldest synthetic pigments in human history. The timeline: (1) Ancient cobalt glass (~1500 BCE): Blue glass colored with cobalt oxide appears in ancient Egyptian and Near Eastern glass-making from approximately 1500 BCE — the blue of ancient Egyptian blue-glass objects (including many items in Tutankhamun's tomb, 1323 BCE) is produced by cobalt oxide coloring. (2) Medieval smalt (~1400-1800 CE): 'Smalt' (also: Vitrum caeruleum — blue glass — ground to a powder) was the most widely used blue pigment for painting in 15th-17th century Europe before the discovery of Prussian blue — it was made by melting cobalt ore with potassium carbonate and silica sand to produce a blue glass, which was then ground to a powder. Smalt appears in paintings by Raphael, Titian, Vermeer, and many other Old Masters. (3) Cobalt blue (~1802): The modern 'cobalt blue' pigment (cobalt aluminate — CoAl₂O₄) was discovered by the French chemist Louis Jacques Thénard (1777-1857) in 1802 — a stable, extremely lightfast, vivid blue pigment produced by calcining cobalt and aluminum compounds. Cobalt blue rapidly replaced smalt and other earlier cobalt pigments because of its superior brilliance, consistency, and stability. (4) Use in enamel: Cobalt has been used to color glass and enamel since antiquity — the characteristic deep blue of Chinese imperial blue-and-white porcelain (qinghua — 青花 — the blue-and-white ware first produced in Jingdezhen in the Yuan dynasty, approximately 1320-1368) uses imported Persian cobalt (huiqing — 回青 — 'Mohammedan blue') as the blue colorant. The specific deep, saturated cobalt blue of Fabergé's enamel is a direct continuation of this centuries-long tradition of cobalt-based blue coloring in decorative arts.
- What proportion creates the most Fabergé Imperial quality?
- Cobalt dominant (45%) as the deep saturated guilloché-enamel cool anchor; Emerald at 30% as the vivid jewel stone-setting secondary; Crimson at 25% as the passionate guilloché warm accent. Cobalt's dominance creates the Fabergé Imperial quality — the deep, infinitely rich cobalt guilloché enamel of the most celebrated blue Imperial eggs creates the most immediately extraordinary and most technically demanding visual effect in the Fabergé palette, against which the vivid emerald of the stone settings creates the most jewel-quality contrast and the passionate crimson of the red guilloché enamel provides the most intensely warm accent.
Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Crimson, Emerald and Cobalt 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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