Red
#FF0000
Lime
#32CD32
Olive
#808000
Red & Lime & Olive
Red, Lime and Olive Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
AnalogousRed, Lime and Olive Color Meaning
Lime and Olive are at opposite ends of the yellow-green spectrum: Lime is fully saturated, vivid, and electric — the youngest, most energetic green. Olive is fully desaturated, dark, and earthy — the oldest, most weathered green. They are the same hue family at completely opposite saturation and brightness levels. Against Red's vivid primary, this creates a palette with maximum internal variety on the green side.
The palette describes the specific contrast between new growth and aged plant matter: a vivid lime-green new shoot against muted olive-brown dried herbs and bark, with vivid red as the ripe fruit or fresh flower. In cooking and botanical illustration, this contrast between fresh vivid herb-green (Lime) and dried herb-olive (Olive) with vivid red vegetables is the palette of the freshest-to-dried herb continuum.
Do Red, Lime and Olive Go Together?
Yes — red, lime and olive go together as one yellow-green family from electric fresh to dry earth with a fire mid. First feel is citrus-grove dry — louder than red-green-olive poppy late-summer, built for outdoor food and craft. Olive leads muted earth; lime holds max fresh; red drives energy so the mix spans yellow-green without leaving warm. Think a farm-stand flag, an olive-oil label with lime seal, or autumn packaging that owns both acid and muted green. Food and outdoor brands lean on this triad for yellow-green earth range. Keep olive as the large field — flood lime and it turns military costume. Citrus-grove dry: strong for produce and outdoor, weak for neon nightlife.
Red, Lime and Olive in Design
Lime and Olive create extreme internal contrast on the green side — the brightest and darkest, most vivid and most muted versions of the same yellow-green family. Red's vivid warmth applies maximum pressure to both simultaneously. The palette has four distinct visual registers: warm vivid (Red), cool fresh vivid (Lime), cool earthy muted (Olive).
Red, Lime and Olive Color Style
Fresh-to-dried herb botanical contrast — the palette of artisan food culture, organic wellness brands, and any design drawing on the contrast between fresh vivid natural green energy and earthy dried organic warmth, unified by vivid warm red.
Red, Lime and Olive in Branding
Artisan food and herb brands, organic wellness consumer goods, natural fresh-to-dried herb culture brands, and any brand contrasting fresh natural energy with earthy organic depth use Red-Lime-Olive.
Brands
Industries
Red, Lime and Olive in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Red-Lime-Olive spans from electric fresh green through vivid red to earthy muted green — the palette of organic outdoor lifestyle fashion. In interiors, the combination creates a botanical space: olive as the aged earthy ground, lime as the fresh vivid accent, and red as the vivid warm focal element.
Red, Lime & Olive — Each Color Separately
Red
#FF0000
Pure vivid red — the warm primary against two very different green expressions.
Explore Red →Lime
#32CD32
Vivid yellow-green — the brightest, most electric expression of fresh green.
Explore Lime →Olive
#808000
Dark muted yellow-green — the earthy, dry, muted opposite of Lime's electric freshness.
Explore Olive →Color Pairs Inside This Trio
Break Red, Lime and Olive into its three two-color combinations to see how each pairing works on its own.
Red, Lime and Olive — FAQ
- Do Red, Lime and Olive work together?
- Yes — Lime and Olive are the brightest and darkest versions of the same yellow-green family; Red is the vivid warm primary. The palette has maximum internal variety on the green side.
- What makes Lime and Olive extreme contrasts?
- Both are yellow-green, but Lime is fully saturated at maximum brightness; Olive is fully desaturated at near-minimum brightness. They are the same hue at completely opposite saturation-brightness extremes.
- What's the fresh-to-dried herb connection?
- Fresh herbs (basil, parsley) are Lime-green at maximum vivid freshness. Dried herbs become Olive — the same plants at maximum earthiness and muting. The palette describes the herb continuum from freshest to most mature.
- Is this palette suitable for food brands?
- Very — for artisan food, herbal wellness, and organic brands that celebrate the continuum from fresh natural to aged organic. The palette communicates authentic naturalness through its botanical authenticity.
- What base works best?
- Warm cream or linen — maintaining the earthy organic quality of Olive while allowing Lime and Red to provide their vivid accents against a warm natural ground.
Red, Lime and Olive Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Red, Lime 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
src="https://colorlab.design/widget/trio/red-lime-olive"
width="420"
height="200"
frameborder="0"
loading="lazy"
style="border:0;border-radius:12px;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%"
title="Red, Lime and Olive color trio palette iframe — free embed widget by ColorLab"
></iframe>Free Red, Lime and Olive palette iframe for blogs, design systems, and developer docs. The widget links back to ColorLab — that's all we ask.