Scarlet
#FF2400
Burgundy
#800020
Lavender
#B57EDC
Scarlet & Burgundy & Lavender
Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
Split-ComplementaryScarlet, Burgundy and Lavender Color Meaning
Burgundy (deep, dark — the characteristic deep dark burgundy of the most immediately specific and the most comprehensively Provençal-wine-tradition-specific of all the Provence AOC wines: the Bandol rouge — the most specifically and the most immediately Mourvèdre-dominated-minimum-50%-and-most-comprehensively-Bandol-AOC-Var-department-coast-specific of any Provençal wine — the specific deep dark burgundy-to-garnet of the most precisely minimum-18-months-oak-aged and the most immediately most-tannic-and-most-age-worthy of any Provence AOC red wine — the most comprehensively internationally prestigious and the most immediately Domaine-Tempier and the most specifically Lucien-Peyraud-tradition-founding of any Provençal wine estate) and Lavender (pale, medium — the characteristic pale medium purple of the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively Provençal-landscape-photography-specific of all the South French agricultural colors: the Plateau de Valensole lavender — the most specifically and the most immediately Lavandula-angustifolia-Plateau-de-Valensole-Alpes-de-Haute-Provence-specific and the most comprehensively most-photographed-French-agricultural-landscape-specific of any Provençal field crop — the specific pale medium purple of the most perfectly blooming and the most immediately July-peak-bloom-specific Valensole lavender — the most comprehensively French-perfume-industry-Grasse-lavender-essential-oil-supplying and the most immediately internationally photographed single agricultural color of any French landscape) create the most specifically Provençal and the most immediately Provence Bandol-lavender wine-floral pair. Against Scarlet's brilliant Provençal-poppy warm, this creates the most specifically Provence wine lavender palette.
The palette is the visual world of Provence and the Plateau de Valensole lavender — the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively lavender-field-and-rosé-wine-and-Grasse-perfume-specific of all the South French regions (Provence — the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively lavender-landscape-and-Cézanne-and-van-Gogh-painting-tradition-specific of any French regional tourism destination — the most directly and the most immediately Roman-Provincia-first-external-Roman-Empire-province-historically-naming of any French region — the most immediately lavender-essential-oil-and-Grasse-perfume-industry-and-Provençal-rosé-wine-internationally-associated of any French regional tourism and gastronomy tradition).
Do Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender Go Together?
Yes — scarlet, burgundy and lavender go together as Grasse rose spring — brilliant perfume scarlet, cellar wine dark, and pale lavender bloom in one Provençal atelier. First impression is grasse-meets-spring — louder than red-burgundy-lavender cellar-meets-spring, built for beauty and weddings. Lavender leads soft pale; burgundy holds aged dark; scarlet adds pure warm with no purple note so the mix stays connected with fragrance weight. Picture a wedding table with wine napkins and lavender wrap, a beauty shelf, or a boutique window that pairs soft purple with cellar red and owns Grasse gravity. Beauty and event brands lean on this triad for soft-plus-depth with French perfume history. Keep scarlet as accent — flood all three and it turns costume romance. Grasse spring: strong for beauty and weddings, weak for night-tech edge.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender in Design
Vivid brilliant Scarlet, deep dark Burgundy, and pale medium Lavender create the most Provence wine lavender and most brilliantly South French split-complementary palette. Provence palette — brilliant scarlet Provençal poppy Papaver field most vividly Mediteranean, deep dark burgundy Bandol rouge Mourvèdre-AOC most deeply Provençal wine, and pale medium lavender Plateau-de-Valensole blooming most brilliantly Provençal floral.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender Color Style
Provence wine lavender and most brilliantly South French — vivid brilliant Scarlet Provençal-poppy, deep dark Burgundy Bandol-rouge-Mourvèdre, and pale medium Lavender Plateau-de-Valensole-blooming. The palette of the most immediately internationally famous South French lavender landscape photography and the most comprehensively Provençal-wine-Grasse-perfume-specific French regional tradition.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender in Branding
Provence wine lavender and most brilliantly South French tradition brands with the most specifically Provençal split-complementary palette, French Provençal heritage and Mediterranean cultural brands, premium luxury Provence lavender and Bandol wine heritage brands with scarlet-burgundy-lavender vocabulary.
Brands
Industries
Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Scarlet-Burgundy-Lavender is the Provence palette — vivid brilliant Scarlet Provençal-poppy, deep dark Burgundy Bandol-rouge, and pale medium Lavender Valensole-blooming. In Provençal-inspired interiors, Lavender as the dominant pale medium lavender-field anchor, Burgundy for the deep dark Bandol secondary, and Scarlet for the brilliant poppy warm jewel.
Scarlet, Burgundy & Lavender — Each Color Separately
Scarlet
#FF2400
Vivid brilliant red — the Provençal poppy in the most Provence wine lavender trio.
Explore Scarlet →Burgundy
#800020
Deep wine red — the Bandol rouge, the most deeply Provençal wine dark.
Explore Burgundy →Lavender
#B57EDC
Pale medium purple — the Plateau de Valensole lavender field, the most brilliantly Provençal floral.
Explore Lavender →Color Pairs Inside This Trio
Break Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender into its three two-color combinations to see how each pairing works on its own.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender — FAQ
- Do Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender work together?
- Yes — most brilliantly Provençal South French split-complementary: Burgundy deep dark Bandol-rouge and Lavender pale medium Valensole-blooming are the most specifically Provençal and the most immediately South French wine-lavender pair, Scarlet brilliant Provençal-poppy the most immediately wildflower-vivid warm. Provence: Scarlet poppy brilliant, Burgundy Bandol deep dark, Lavender Valensole pale medium.
- What is the Grasse perfume tradition?
- Grasse (the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively perfume-capital-of-the-world-designation-specific of any French city — UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage since 2018 for 'the perfumery knowledge and practices of Grasse' — the most immediately personally famous perfume houses including: Galimard — founded 1747 CE; Molinard — founded 1849 CE; and Fragonard — founded 1926 CE — the most comprehensively oldest-continuously-operating and the most immediately internationally most-visited of any Grasse perfume houses) is famous for: (1) The 'nose' tradition (the most immediately professionally specific and the most comprehensively 5-to-7-year-perfumery-training-specific of any Grasse perfume master — the most directly and the most immediately École-Supérieure-du-Parfum-Paris-and-Grasse-tradition-training-specific of any French perfumery professional — a master 'nose' capable of the most immediately identifying and the most specifically composing-from-memory of approximately 3,000 distinct aromatic ingredients — the most comprehensively memory-trained and the most immediately olfactorily-specific of any French craft tradition); (2) Grasse flowers (the most immediately specific and the most comprehensively Provençal-flower-tradition-specific agricultural heritage of any Grasse perfumery ingredient — the most specifically May-rose-Rosa-centifolia — the 'rose of May' — the most immediately labor-intensive and the most comprehensively hand-harvest-only of any Grasse perfumery ingredient; jasmine — Jasminum grandiflorum — the most immediately fragrance-intensity-specific and the most specifically hand-harvest-only of any Grasse jasmine variety; tuberose — the most immediately heady-fragrance-specific; and the most comprehensively lavender — from the most immediately Valensole Plateau and the most specifically Haute-Provence lavender region of any Grasse lavender supply).
- What proportion creates the most Provençal lavender quality?
- Lavender dominant (55%) as the pale medium Valensole-blooming Provençal primary; Burgundy at 25% as the deep dark Bandol-wine secondary; Scarlet at 20% as the brilliant Provençal-poppy warm jewel. Lavender's dominance creates the Provençal quality — the vast, pale, atmospherically specific medium purple of the most immediately internationally photographed and the most comprehensively Plateau-de-Valensole-peak-bloom-specific lavender field — the most directly and the most immediately European-agricultural-landscape-photography-most-iconic and the most comprehensively French-Provence-tourism-identity-defining single color element of any French agricultural tradition — is the single most immediately South-French-landscape-color-identifying and the most comprehensively Provençal-agricultural-tradition-representing color element; Burgundy's deep dark Bandol provides the most immediately Mourvèdre-wine-tradition-prestigious secondary; and Scarlet's brilliant poppy provides the most immediately wildflower-color-contrast-specific and the most comprehensively field-border-botanical warm accent.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender 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/scarlet-burgundy-lavender"
width="420"
height="200"
frameborder="0"
loading="lazy"
style="border:0;border-radius:12px;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%"
title="Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender color trio palette iframe — free embed widget by ColorLab"
></iframe>Free Scarlet, Burgundy and Lavender palette iframe for blogs, design systems, and developer docs. The widget links back to ColorLab — that's all we ask.