Red
#FF0000
Teal
#008080
Blue
#0000FF
Red & Teal & Blue
Red, Teal and Blue Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
Split-ComplementaryRed, Teal and Blue Color Meaning
Teal and Blue share the blue element — Teal is blue mixed with equal green, creating a balanced blue-green. Blue is pure primary blue. Together they create a cool range: Blue at maximum primary cool saturation and Teal at blue-green balanced depth. Against Red's vivid primary, the palette creates a warm-against-two-cool relationship where the two cools are related (both contain blue) but distinct in character — primary blue directness versus blue-green balanced depth.
The palette has a strong connection to water in all its forms: Blue is the color of open ocean and clear sky; Teal is the color of coastal shallows, tropical bays, and the specific quality of water where sand and blue meet. Against Red as a beach or marine element — red kayaks, red life-rings, red marine buoys — the palette describes the visual experience of coastal and marine environments with their range from pure blue depth to teal shallow warmth.
Do Red, Teal and Blue Go Together?
Yes — red, teal and blue go together as buoy, shallow bay, and deep water — full coastal stack with fire signal. First impression is harbor-buoy clarity — cooler-water than red-emerald-blue gem-primary, built for travel and marine lifestyle. Blue holds deep cool; teal is shallow mid; red is the warm signal so the mix feels maritime and inhabited. Picture a sailing lookbook, a shoreline cafe, or a travel poster with blue-teal ground under a red mark. Travel and outdoor brands lean on this triad for complete coast. Keep blue as the large field — equal warms tip into carnival noise. Harbor buoy: strong for coastal travel, weak for soft spa.
Red, Teal and Blue in Design
Blue and Teal create a coherent cool range that reads as unified cool water and sky — two blues at different green-admixture levels. Red provides vivid warm contrast to both simultaneously. The palette is clean, cool-dominant with vivid warm accent — appropriate for marine, coastal, and water-related contexts.
Red, Teal and Blue Color Style
Marine and coastal water range — pure blue depth and teal shallow warmth, with vivid red as the warm coastal accent element. The palette of marine design, coastal lifestyle brands, and water sports culture.
Red, Teal and Blue in Branding
Marine and coastal lifestyle brands, water sports consumer goods, naval and maritime heritage brands, coastal tourism and hospitality brands, and any brand communicating the visual range of marine coastal environments from deep blue through shallow teal with vivid warm accent use Red-Teal-Blue.
Brands
Industries
Red, Teal and Blue in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Red-Teal-Blue is the coastal marine statement — vivid warm primary against a unified cool marine range from pure blue depth to teal shallow warmth. In interiors, the palette creates a coastal space: blue for deep cool atmospheric walls, teal for warm coastal water accent elements, and red for vivid warm marine focal accents.
Red, Teal & Blue — Each Color Separately
Red
#FF0000
Pure vivid red — the vivid warm primary across the wheel from two related cool colors.
Explore Red →Teal
#008080
Blue-green depth — balanced between blue and green, a bridge between the two cool elements in the palette.
Explore Teal →Blue
#0000FF
Pure vivid blue — the cool primary, sharing blue component with Teal but at maximum vivid primary saturation.
Explore Blue →Color Pairs Inside This Trio
Break Red, Teal and Blue into its three two-color combinations to see how each pairing works on its own.
Red, Teal and Blue — FAQ
- Do Red, Teal and Blue work together?
- Yes — Teal and Blue are related cools (both contain blue) at different blue-green balance points; Red is the vivid warm primary contrast across both. The palette reads as coastal marine color with vivid warm accent.
- How do Teal and Blue differ despite sharing blue?
- Blue is pure primary blue — completely saturated, direct, and primary. Teal balances equal parts blue and green, giving it a blue-green quality that reads as coastal shallow water, weathered copper, and natural water environments. They are related but visually distinct.
- What's the coastal water connection?
- Deep ocean is pure blue. Coastal shallows and tropical bays are teal — where blue water mixes with sandy bottom light and warm shallow depth. The transition from blue to teal describes the visual gradient from deep to shallow coastal water.
- Is this palette appropriate for inland brands?
- The strong marine associations require care for inland brands. For inland water (rivers, lakes), the palette works well. For non-water brands, the cool-dominant quality can communicate calm, clarity, and cool competence — appropriate for technology and professional services brands.
- What proportion creates the best marine balance?
- Blue dominant (35-45%) as the deep cool primary ground; Teal at 30-35% as the balanced blue-green coastal accent; Red at 20-25% as the vivid warm marine focal element. This mirrors the actual proportion of open water to coastal shallows to vivid warm markers in the marine environment.
Red, Teal and Blue Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Red, Teal 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/red-teal-blue"
width="420"
height="200"
frameborder="0"
loading="lazy"
style="border:0;border-radius:12px;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%"
title="Red, Teal and Blue color trio palette iframe — free embed widget by ColorLab"
></iframe>Free Red, Teal and Blue palette iframe for blogs, design systems, and developer docs. The widget links back to ColorLab — that's all we ask.