Crimson
#DC143C
Green
#008000
Blue
#0000FF
Crimson & Green & Blue
Crimson, Green and Blue Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
TriadicCrimson, Green and Blue Color Meaning
In the RGB additive color model, Red and Blue are two of the three primaries; Green is not a RGB secondary but is itself the third primary. The combination Crimson-Green-Blue approximates the RGB primary triad (Red-Green-Blue) — the most fundamental color relationship in additive light systems (screens, projectors, television, and all digital display technologies). Unlike the RYB model's triad (Red-Yellow-Blue), the RGB triad covers the entire visible spectrum with maximum chromatic breadth.
The palette is the visual world of the Lucha Libre wrestling tradition — specifically the most celebrated lucha libre venues of Mexico City (Arena México, founded 1956 — the 'Cathedral of Lucha Libre' — and Arena Coliseo, founded 1943) and the costume tradition of the most famous enmascarados (masked wrestlers). The Lucha Libre palette: the deep crimson of the ring canvas (the lucha libre ring's canvas covering is traditionally red or crimson, creating the most dramatically vivid warm ground for the performance); the vivid mid-green of the most celebrated luchador masks (specifically the emerald-to-green mask of El Santo's early career and the masks of various green-themed luchadors); and the vivid blue of the most iconic luchador costume and mask elements (the cobalt-to-blue of Blue Demon's mask — the most celebrated blue in the history of lucha libre).
Do Crimson, Green and Blue Go Together?
Yes — crimson, green and blue go together as lucha libre pixel ring — cool-red canvas flash, green screen mid, and pure blue light corner in one Arena México night. First impression is encordado-pixel completeness — cooler than red-green-blue pixel-grid, built for tech and creative culture. Blue, green, and crimson each hold a primary corner so the mix reads as complete color technology with lucha weight, not a decorative blend. Picture a tech brand mark, a pixel-art merch drop, or a studio poster that owns all three screen primaries from across a room and keeps Arena gravity. Tech and digital brands lean on this triad for universal recognition with Mexican wrestling history. Keep one tone as the large field — equal blocks tip into vibrating costume. Encordado primary: strong for tech and digital art, weak for soft spa.
Crimson, Green and Blue in Design
Deep passionate Crimson, vivid mid-Green, and maximum-vivid Blue create the most RGB primary triadic and most Lucha Libre arena chromatic palette. Lucha Libre palette — passionate crimson ring-canvas, vivid green enmascarado-mask, and maximum-vivid blue Blue-Demon-mask.
Crimson, Green and Blue Color Style
Mexican Lucha Libre and Arena México tradition — deep Crimson passionate ring-canvas, vivid mid-Green enmascarado-mask emerald, and maximum-vivid Blue Blue-Demon blue-mask. The palette of the most theatrically vivid and most culturally distinctive Mexican popular entertainment tradition.
Crimson, Green and Blue in Branding
Mexican Lucha Libre and Arena México tradition brands with the most RGB-primary triadic chromatic palette, Mexican popular culture and entertainment heritage brands with the lucha libre aesthetic, premium sports entertainment and performance brands with the most vivid RGB-primary vocabulary, Mexican cultural identity and global entertainment brands with the most theatrically distinctive tradition, and any brand communicating passionate crimson ring-canvas, vivid green enmascarado-mask, and maximum-vivid blue Blue-Demon-mask — deep Crimson ring, vivid Green mask, and vivid Blue mask — use Crimson-Green-Blue.
Brands
Industries
Crimson, Green and Blue in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Crimson-Green-Blue is the Mexican Lucha Libre and RGB primary palette — deep Crimson passionate ring-canvas, vivid mid-Green enmascarado-mask, and maximum-vivid Blue Blue-Demon-mask. In Lucha Libre-inspired and most RGB-primary triadic interiors, equal-proportion maximum-vivid for complete chromatic spectacle: Crimson, Green, and Blue each at near-maximum saturation.
Crimson, Green & Blue — Each Color Separately
Crimson
#DC143C
Deep vivid red — the passionate warm RGB primary, most dramatically contrasted by the two cool primaries.
Explore Crimson →Green
#008000
Standard mid-green — the warm-shifted RGB secondary, between the two RGB primaries.
Explore Green →Blue
#0000FF
Maximum-saturation pure blue — the cool RGB primary, farthest from Red in the RGB color model.
Explore Blue →Color Pairs Inside This Trio
Break Crimson, Green and Blue into its three two-color combinations to see how each pairing works on its own.
Crimson, Green and Blue — FAQ
- Do Crimson, Green and Blue work together?
- Yes — RGB primary triadic (approximation): Red (Crimson), Green, Blue — the three primary colors of the additive light system. Mexican Lucha Libre: Crimson ring-canvas passionate, Green enmascarado-mask vivid, Blue Blue-Demon-mask maximum vivid.
- What is Lucha Libre and how is it different from American professional wrestling?
- Lucha Libre (Spanish: free fight or free wrestling) is a style of professional wrestling originating in Mexico in the early 20th century, distinguished from North American professional wrestling by specific technical and theatrical features: (1) Mask tradition — the lucha libre mask (máscara) is the most iconic element of the tradition; approximately 75% of lucha libre performers wear masks, and the mask is a sacred object that the wearer is not supposed to remove except in 'apuesta' matches where the mask is wagered against another wrestler's mask or hair; (2) High-flying style — lucha libre is characterized by aerial acrobatics (topes — high-speed planchas from the ring, topes suicidas — diving through the ropes), complex arm drags, and extremely fast-paced sequences; (3) Rudo/Técnico distinction — lucha libre uses the rudo (villain — rule-breaker) vs. técnico (hero — rule-follower) character distinction, similar to the heel/face dichotomy of American wrestling; (4) Cultural significance — lucha libre is more deeply embedded in Mexican popular culture than wrestling in any other national context, with luchadores appearing in films, comic books, television, and everyday consumer products.
- Who is El Santo and why is he the most important luchador?
- El Santo (Rodolfo Guzmán Huerta, 1917-1984 — his ring name 'El Santo' means 'The Saint') is the most celebrated and most culturally significant luchador in the history of lucha libre and one of the most iconic figures in Mexican popular culture. Active from 1934 to 1982 (a 48-year career), El Santo is distinguished by: (1) His silver mask — El Santo's silver mask, adopted in 1942, became the most immediately recognizable costume element in Mexican entertainment; the silver mask was so identified with El Santo that he reportedly slept wearing it and was buried wearing it in 1984; (2) His film career — El Santo appeared in 52 films between 1958 and 1982, creating the 'Luchador film' genre (in which the masked hero battles vampires, mummies, alien invaders, and mad scientists); (3) Comic books — El Santo appeared in a comic book series that ran from 1952 to 1987, one of the longest-running Mexican comic series; (4) Cultural symbol — El Santo became a symbol of Mexican popular identity that transcended the wrestling context, representing the specifically Mexican combination of popular entertainment, moral heroism, and theatrical spectacle.
- What is the RGB additive color model and how does it differ from RYB?
- The RGB (Red-Green-Blue) additive color model describes how light creates color: red light (approximately 700nm), green light (approximately 546nm), and blue light (approximately 436nm) combine additively to create white (all three at maximum) and can create any visible color by varying the intensity of each. RGB is the color model of all electronic displays (CRT, LCD, OLED, LED), projectors, and theatrical lighting — any screen you look at uses RGB light mixing. The RYB (Red-Yellow-Blue) model is the traditional pigment-mixing model used in fine art education — it describes how pigments combine subtractively (mixing red and yellow pigment creates orange, mixing yellow and blue creates green). The two models are incompatible: in RGB, Red + Green = Yellow (surprising to those trained in RYB, where Red + Green would create brown); in RYB, Yellow + Blue = Green (which RGB also achieves but through different mechanisms). The Crimson-Green-Blue trio: in RGB, these are two of the three primaries (Red and Blue) plus the third primary (Green), creating the most fundamental harmonic structure in additive color.
- What proportion creates the most Lucha Libre arena quality?
- Crimson dominant (40%) as the passionate ring-canvas primary warm ground; Blue at 35% as the maximum-vivid Blue-Demon cool opposite; Green at 25% as the vivid enmascarado-mask cool secondary. Crimson's dominance creates the Lucha Libre quality — the ring canvas as the most expansive and most continuously present visual element (the entire floor of the ring, the largest visible surface), with Blue's maximum-vivid mask-and-costume and Green's vivid enmascarado-mask creating the complete Arena México palette.
Crimson, Green and Blue Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Crimson, Green and Blue 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/trio/crimson-green-blue"
width="420"
height="200"
frameborder="0"
loading="lazy"
style="border:0;border-radius:12px;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%"
title="Crimson, Green and Blue color trio palette iframe — free embed widget by ColorLab"
></iframe>Free Crimson, Green and Blue palette iframe for blogs, design systems, and developer docs. The widget links back to ColorLab — that's all we ask.