Burgundy
#800020
Indigo
#4B0082
White
#FFFFFF
Burgundy & Indigo & White
Burgundy, Indigo and White Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
AccentBurgundy, Indigo and White Color Meaning
A deep wine red meets dark indigo and clean white. The white sharpens the deep tone, giving a porcelain-ink mood like blue-black ink on a crisp white page.
It shows up in tech and stationery branding, clean packaging, and bright, modern interiors.
Burgundy, Indigo and White in Design
Great for tech, stationery, and clean brands, plus crisp packaging. The white sharpens the dark indigo for a fresh, modern look while the wine base adds a rich note. It suits clean, modern, and grown-up styles. A porcelain-ink combo. Less suited to moody, rustic, or muted brands.
Burgundy, Indigo and White Color Style
Fresh, sharp, and modern. The white sharpens the dark indigo, with the wine base adding a rich note. This is clean color — modern and grown-up, made to feel crisp yet deep, not moody or muted.
What Burgundy, Indigo and White Mean Together
Picture blue-black ink on a crisp white page, with a deep red seal. In clothes, a white shirt with an indigo coat and wine shoes looks fresh and sharp. Works all year. The mood is crisp and modern — clean and grown-up, the kind of look made for neat, focused days.
Burgundy, Indigo and White in Branding
Fits tech, stationery, and clean brands that want a fresh, sharp, modern look. Clean and grown-up, not moody or muted.
Brands
Industries
Burgundy, Indigo and White in Fashion & Interior
At home this feels fresh and sharp, like a clean modern room. Use white as the base, add the indigo in art and textiles, and the wine base in accents. In clothes, the white sharpens the indigo. Works all year; keep white dominant for a crisp feel.
Burgundy, Indigo & White — Each Color Separately
Burgundy, Indigo and White — FAQ
- Do Burgundy, Indigo and White work together?
- Yes. The white sharpens the dark indigo for a fresh, modern look, with the wine base adding a rich note.
- What does this trio mean?
- Freshness, focus, and depth. It feels crisp yet deep rather than moody or muted.
- Where is this palette used?
- Tech and stationery branding, clean packaging, and bright interiors.
- Can I use this trio for a logo?
- Yes, for tech, stationery, or clean brands that want crispness. Less fitting for moody or rustic brands.
- What colors go with this trio?
- Gray cools it. Cream warms it. Silver adds shine. Too many bright accents break the crisp mood, so use them lightly.