Scarlet
#FF2400
Burgundy
#800020
Purple
#800080
Scarlet & Burgundy & Purple
Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
AnalogousScarlet, Burgundy and Purple Color Meaning
Burgundy (deep, dark — the characteristic deep dark burgundy of the most immediately specific and the most comprehensively French-aristocratic-wine-tradition-specific of all the French AOC wines: the aged Bordeaux — the most specifically and the most immediately Cabernet-Sauvignon-Merlot-Cabernet-Franc-Petit-Verdot-blend-and-most-comprehensively-Médoc-and-Saint-Émilion-and-Pomerol-AOC-region-specific of any French wine appellation — the specific deep dark burgundy-to-garnet of the most precisely Cru-Classé-minimum-years-aged Bordeaux Claret — the most comprehensively French-aristocratic-court-and-châteaux-estate-tradition-specific and the most immediately Château-Lafite-Margaux-Latour-Pétrus-internationally-prestige of any French wine tradition) and Purple (deep, royal — the characteristic deep royal purple of the most immediately specific and the most comprehensively French-Bourbon-royal-court-tradition-specific of all the French royal ceremonial vestment colors: the Bourbon royal mantle purple — the most specifically and the most immediately French-Bourbon-dynasty-royal-purple-mantle-tradition and the most comprehensively Grand-Habit-de-Cour-purple-velvet-fleur-de-lis-gold-embroidered of any French royal ceremonial vestment tradition — the specific deep royal purple of the most precisely Tyrian-purple-dyed and the most immediately French-royal-fleur-de-lis-gold-embroidered royal mantle — the most comprehensively Bourbon-dynasty-sun-king-Louis-XIV-and-XV-and-XVI-court-ceremonially-specific of any French royal court vestment) create the most specifically Versailles and the most immediately French Bourbon court aged-Bordeaux-royal-purple pair. Against Scarlet's brilliant French-fleur-de-lis warm, this creates the most specifically Versailles French Bourbon royal court palette.
The palette is the visual world of Versailles and the French Bourbon royal court — the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively French-Absolutism-sun-king-specific of all the French royal historical sites (the Palace of Versailles — the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively UNESCO-World-Heritage-Site-French-royal-palace-specific of any surviving European royal palace — UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1979 — the most immediately Louis XIV-commissioning from 1661 CE and the most specifically Versailles-relocated-royal-court-1682-CE of any French royal palace tradition — attracting approximately 7-8 million visitors per year — the most immediately internationally visited royal palace in the world).
Do Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple Go Together?
Yes — scarlet, burgundy and purple go together as Escorial throne darks — brilliant Habsburg scarlet, Castilian wine dark, and Tyrian purple mystery in one court field. First impression is escorial-throne depth — louder than red-burgundy-purple considered-throne, built for ceremony and luxury. Purple and burgundy share deep richness without matching; scarlet adds life so the mix feels chosen with Escorial weight, not costume. Think a theater curtain with wine and purple folds, a spirits label, or a fashion look that owns rare cool and wine dark with Spanish court gravity. Ceremony and luxury brands lean on this triad for inherited depth with Habsburg history. Keep purple as accent or deep field — flood all three and it turns costume villain. Escorial throne: strong for ceremony and luxury, weak for casual errands.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple in Design
Vivid brilliant Scarlet, deep dark Burgundy, and deep royal Purple create the most Versailles French Bourbon court and most brilliantly French royal analogous palette. Versailles French royal palette — brilliant scarlet French fleur-de-lis royal heraldry most vividly Bourbon court, deep dark burgundy Bordeaux Cru-Classé-aged most deeply French aristocratic, and deep royal purple Bourbon royal mantle gold-embroidered most brilliantly French royal.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple Color Style
Versailles French Bourbon royal court and most brilliantly French royal — vivid brilliant Scarlet French-fleur-de-lis, deep dark Burgundy Bordeaux-Cru-Classé, and deep royal Purple Bourbon-royal-mantle. The palette of the most immediately internationally famous French royal palace and the most comprehensively Louis XIV-Sun-King-Versailles-absolute-monarchy-specific French heritage.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple in Branding
Versailles French Bourbon court and most brilliantly French royal tradition brands with the most specifically Versailles analogous palette, French royal heritage and Bourbon cultural brands, premium luxury Versailles and French royal heritage brands with scarlet-burgundy-purple vocabulary.
Brands
Industries
Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Scarlet-Burgundy-Purple is the Versailles French Bourbon palette — vivid brilliant Scarlet French-fleur-de-lis, deep dark Burgundy Bordeaux-Cru-Classé, and deep royal Purple Bourbon-royal-mantle. In Versailles-Baroque-inspired interiors, Purple as the dominant deep royal mantle anchor, Burgundy for the deep dark Bordeaux secondary, and Scarlet for the brilliant fleur-de-lis warm jewel.
Scarlet, Burgundy & Purple — Each Color Separately
Scarlet
#FF2400
Vivid brilliant red — the Versailles fleur-de-lis in the most French Bourbon court trio.
Explore Scarlet →Burgundy
#800020
Deep wine red — the aged Bordeaux, the most deeply French royal court dark.
Explore Burgundy →Purple
#800080
Deep royal purple — the Bourbon royal mantle, the most brilliantly French royal.
Explore Purple →Color Pairs Inside This Trio
Break Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple into its three two-color combinations to see how each pairing works on its own.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple — FAQ
- Do Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple work together?
- Yes — most brilliantly French Bourbon Versailles analogous: Burgundy deep dark Bordeaux-Cru-Classé and Purple deep royal Bourbon-mantle are the most specifically French and the most immediately Versailles-court wine-royal pair, Scarlet brilliant fleur-de-lis the most immediately heraldically French warm. Versailles: Scarlet fleur-de-lis brilliant, Burgundy Bordeaux deep dark, Purple Bourbon mantle deep royal.
- What is the Hall of Mirrors and its diplomatic history?
- The Galerie des Glaces — Hall of Mirrors (the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively Jules-Hardouin-Mansart-designing and the most specifically 1678-1684-CE-construction of any French royal ceremonial gallery — approximately 73 meters long by 10.5 meters wide by 12.3 meters high — featuring 357 mirrors reflecting 17 arched windows — the most immediately dramatically light-reflecting and the most comprehensively Baroque-palatial-architecture-grandeur-specific of any French royal ceremonial room) has been the venue for: (1) The proclamation of the German Empire (January 18, 1871 CE — the most immediately diplomatically humiliating and the most comprehensively French-national-pride-devastating of any German proclamation in France — Kaiser Wilhelm I proclaimed German Emperor in the most immediately symbolically significant and the most specifically French-royal-ceremonial-grandeur-specific Versailles Hall of Mirrors — the most directly and the most immediately Franco-Prussian-War-French-defeat-specifically-marking of any German imperial proclamation ceremony — the most comprehensively diplomatically chosen and the most immediately personally Bismarck-politically-motivated venue selection of any German imperial proclamation); (2) The Treaty of Versailles (June 28, 1919 CE — the most immediately World-War-I-ending and the most comprehensively most-disputed-20th-century-peace-treaty-specific of any modern peace agreement — signed in the most immediately symbolically chosen Hall of Mirrors — the most directly and the most immediately symmetrically-reversing-the-1871-German-proclamation and the most specifically Allied-Powers-diplomatically-deliberate venue choice of any post-World-War-I peace treaty signing venue — containing: the most immediately controversial Article 231 — 'War Guilt Clause' — the most comprehensively German-reparations-and-responsibility-specifying of any post-World-War-I peace treaty clause).
- What proportion creates the most Versailles French Bourbon quality?
- Purple dominant (50%) as the deep royal Bourbon-mantle ceremonial anchor; Burgundy at 30% as the deep dark Bordeaux secondary; Scarlet at 20% as the brilliant fleur-de-lis warm jewel. Purple's dominance creates the Versailles French Bourbon quality — the vast, deep, royally specific purple of the most immediately Tyrian-purple-dyed-tradition and the most comprehensively French-Bourbon-dynasty-royal-ceremonial-mantle-specific velvet — covering every most important French royal coronation mantle at Reims Cathedral, every most specifically French royal court ceremony at Versailles, and every most comprehensively Bourbon-dynasty-royal-portrait-Louis-XIV-through-Louis-XVI of any French royal tradition — is the single most immediately royal-status-color-specific and the most comprehensively French-Bourbon-monarchy-representing color element; Burgundy's deep dark Bordeaux provides the most immediately aristocratic-wine-tradition secondary; and Scarlet's brilliant fleur-de-lis provides the most immediately royal-heraldic and the most comprehensively French-Capetian-tradition warm accent.
Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple Color Palette iframe Embed
Embed the Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple 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-purple"
width="420"
height="200"
frameborder="0"
loading="lazy"
style="border:0;border-radius:12px;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%"
title="Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple color trio palette iframe — free embed widget by ColorLab"
></iframe>Free Scarlet, Burgundy and Purple palette iframe for blogs, design systems, and developer docs. The widget links back to ColorLab — that's all we ask.