Crimson
#DC143C
Green
#008000
Rose
#FF007F
Crimson & Green & Rose
Crimson, Green and Rose Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
AnalogousCrimson, Green and Rose Color Meaning
Crimson (hue 350°) and Rose (hue 330°) are 20° apart — the most closely related warm pair possible, creating a deeply harmonious analogous warm family. Against Green's vivid complementary opposite, the palette achieves the most natural rose-family tension — the two warm colors reinforce each other in their passion and intensity, while Green creates the most dramatically cool spatial contrast. The palette is the most naturally romantic and the most garden-evocative of all warm-on-green combinations.
The palette is the visual world of the Bulgarian rose oil tradition — specifically the Valley of Roses (Розова долина — Rozova dolina) in Kazanlak, Bulgaria, which produces approximately 70-80% of the world's Rosa damascena rose attar (rose oil). The Bulgarian rose valley palette: the deep vivid crimson of the most mature and most richly colored Rosa damascena flowers (at the peak of the 10-day harvest window in May), the vivid mid-green of the rose bushes and the surrounding Kazanlak valley landscape, and the vivid deep pink-to-rose of the most characteristic Rosa damascena flower (which in its standard form is a medium-to-deep rose-pink rather than crimson).
Do Crimson, Green and Rose Go Together?
Yes — crimson, green and rose go together as Isparta Damascena florist — cool-red mature Damask bloom, living green stem, and rose passionate pink in one Anatolian harvest counter. First feel is damascena-counter passion — cooler than red-green-rose florist-counter, built for romance and beauty. Rose pulls pink passion; green holds leaf and thorn; crimson is the classic bloom so the mix feels botanical and romantic at once with attar weight. Picture a florist wrap, a date table with rose and leaf, or a beauty shelf that owns both crimson and rose on green and keeps Isparta gravity. Beauty and romance brands lean on this triad for full bloom narrative with Turkish rose-oil history. Keep rose as the bright flash — flood all three and it turns costume romance. Damascena florist: strong for dates and floristry, weak for gym-ready looks.
Crimson, Green and Rose in Design
Deep passionate Crimson, vivid mid-Green, and vivid deep Rose create the most Bulgarian rose valley and most naturally romantic analogous warm-on-green palette. Kazanlak rose valley palette — passionate crimson mature Damascena rose, vivid green bush valley, and vivid rose standard Damascena-pink.
Crimson, Green and Rose Color Style
Bulgarian Valley of Roses and Rosa damascena attar tradition — deep Crimson passionate mature Damascena, vivid mid-Green rose-bush valley, and vivid Rose standard Damascena-pink. The palette of the most important and most historically celebrated rose oil production tradition in the world.
Crimson, Green and Rose in Branding
Bulgarian rose valley and Rosa damascena attar tradition brands with the most naturally romantic warm-on-green analogous palette, luxury fragrance and beauty brands with the Kazanlak rose oil tradition, premium Bulgarian heritage and agricultural tradition brands with the most romantically passionate rose vocabulary, luxury natural fragrance and botanical brands with the most historically significant rose oil tradition, and any brand communicating passionate crimson mature-Damascena, vivid green valley, and vivid rose standard-Damascena-pink — deep Crimson mature, vivid Green valley, and vivid Rose Damascena — use Crimson-Green-Rose.
Brands
Industries
Crimson, Green and Rose in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Crimson-Green-Rose is the Bulgarian rose valley and Rosa damascena palette — deep Crimson passionate mature Damascena, vivid mid-Green valley landscape, and vivid Rose standard Damascena-pink. In rose-valley-inspired and most romantically passionate interiors, Rose as the vivid warm rose-pink primary, Green for the vivid naturalistic secondary, and Crimson for the passionate mature-rose accent.
Crimson, Green & Rose — Each Color Separately
Crimson
#DC143C
Deep vivid red — the passionate warm primary, darkest and most vivid of the red arc.
Explore Crimson →Green
#008000
Standard mid-green — the vivid cool complementary, most dramatically different from both warm elements.
Explore Green →Rose
#FF007F
Vivid deep pink — mid-saturation warm pink, between Crimson's depth and Magenta's electricity.
Explore Rose →Color Pairs Inside This Trio
Break Crimson, Green and Rose into its three two-color combinations to see how each pairing works on its own.
Crimson, Green and Rose — FAQ
- Do Crimson, Green and Rose work together?
- Yes — most naturally romantic analogous warm-on-green: Crimson and Rose 20° apart in warm arc (most closely harmonious warm pair), Green the vivid complementary opposite. Bulgarian rose valley: Crimson mature-Damascena passionate, Green valley vivid, Rose standard-Damascena warm vivid.
- What is the Bulgarian Valley of Roses and its rose oil tradition?
- The Bulgarian Valley of Roses (Розова долина — Rozova dolina), centered on the town of Kazanlak (Казанлък) in the Stara Zagora Province, is the world's most important production region for Rosa damascena rose attar (rose oil). Bulgaria produces approximately 70-80% of the world's Rosa damascena rose oil in most years. The tradition dates to at least the 17th century: Ottoman merchants first established systematic Rosa damascena cultivation in the Kazanlak valley in the late 17th century, recognizing the valley's exceptional microclimate for rose cultivation. Commercial production scale: approximately 18,000-20,000 hectares of rose cultivation (primarily in the Kazanlak valley and in the nearby Thracian valley south of the Rhodope Mountains), employing approximately 300,000-500,000 seasonal workers during the approximately 10-14 day harvest window in late May. The annual harvest: approximately 3,500-4,000 tonnes of rose petals, yielding approximately 1,000-1,500 kg of rose attar — selling for approximately $6,000-10,000 USD per kilogram at wholesale, making Bulgarian rose attar one of the highest-value agricultural products in the world per kilogram.
- What is rose attar and how is it produced?
- Rose attar (also: attar of roses, otto of roses, rose oil — from Arabic: itr — perfume, scent) is the essential oil extracted from rose petals by hydro-distillation (steam distillation). The production process: (1) Fresh petals (typically Rosa damascena 'Trigintipetala' or 'Kazanlashka') are combined with water and steam-distilled in traditional copper alembics (pot stills, 100-1,000 liter capacity); (2) The distillate (the steam condensed back to liquid) contains both rose water (hydrosol — the aqueous phase) and the floating rose attar (the essential oil phase — which is collected separately); (3) The attar is re-distilled (cohobation — redistilling the rose water back through the still while adding more petals, to maximize oil recovery); (4) The final attar is filtered and stored in sealed containers. Chemistry: Bulgarian rose attar contains approximately 300+ chemical compounds, the most important being geraniol (18-22%), citronellol (34-55%), nerol (3-9%), and phenylethanol (1-2%) — plus the critical trace compounds β-damascenone (at extremely low concentration, approximately 0.01-0.08%, but with extraordinary potency as the 'rose' character compound).
- What is the annual Rose Festival in Kazanlak and its cultural significance?
- The Kazanlak Rose Festival (Розобер — Rozobar — literally 'rose-picking') is held annually in the first week of June in Kazanlak and the surrounding rose-growing villages. The festival's events: (1) The Queen of the Rose Festival — the election of a young woman to represent the rose harvest tradition for the year; (2) The dawn rose-picking — a ceremonial early-morning picking of roses (typically beginning at 4-5 AM to coincide with the dew-soaked ideal picking window) in which visitors participate; (3) Traditional folk music and dance performances; (4) Demonstrations of traditional rose-oil distillation using historic copper alembics; (5) The Kazanlak Tomb — Bulgaria's most important Thracian archaeological monument (a 4th-3rd century BCE Thracian burial mound with extraordinarily preserved frescoes, designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979) is located in the center of Kazanlak, making the rose festival a combination of traditional agricultural celebration and archaeological heritage tourism.
- What proportion creates the most rose valley harvest quality?
- Rose dominant (45%) as the vivid standard-Damascena rose-pink warm primary; Green at 35% as the vivid valley-landscape-and-bush naturalistic secondary; Crimson at 20% as the passionate mature-rose accent. Rose's dominance creates the Bulgarian rose valley quality — the characteristic Rosa damascena in standard full-bloom (the most common stage during the harvest window) is rose-pink rather than crimson, and the mass display of rose-pink flowers across thousands of hectares of the Kazanlak valley is the defining visual experience of the rose harvest, with Green's vivid valley landscape and Crimson's passionate mature-flower deepness creating the complete Bulgarian rose attar palette.
Crimson, Green and Rose Color Palette iframe Embed
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