Burgundy
#800020
Orange
#FF7F00
Cobalt
#0047AB
Burgundy & Orange & Cobalt
Burgundy, Orange and Cobalt Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
Split-ComplementaryBurgundy, Orange and Cobalt Color Meaning
The palette captures the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively Uzbek-Samarkand-UNESCO-and-Timurid-lacquer-deep-burgundy-and-Registan-sunset-vivid-orange-and-cobalt-dome-deep-cobalt-tradition-specific of all the Central Asian UNESCO heritage Uzbek Samarkandi Silk Road cultures: Samarkand — the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively UNESCO-World-Heritage-Site-Samarkand-Crossroad-Cultures-2001-CE-inscribed and the most specifically Timurid-lacquer-deep-burgundy-and-Registan-vivid-orange-and-cobalt-dome-deep-cobalt-tradition-specific of any Central Asian UNESCO Uzbek Samarkandi heritage.
Burgundy is the Timurid lacquer — the deep wine red of the most immediately famous Uzbek Samarkand Timurid — Registan lacquer — wine-red tile — deep-wine-burgundy and the Gur-e-Amir mausoleum tradition. Orange is the Registan sunset — the vivid orange of the most immediately beautiful Uzbek Samarkand Registan — bazaar saffron — sunset — vivid-orange and the Silk Road orange tile tradition. Cobalt is the Sher-Dor dome — the deep cobalt of the most immediately famous Uzbek Samarkand Sher-Dor madrassa — cobalt dome — lapis tile — deep-cobalt and the Bibi-Khanym mosque tile tradition.
Burgundy, Orange and Cobalt in Design
Deep wine Burgundy, vivid Orange, and deep Cobalt create the most Samarkandi Central Asian Timurid Silk Road and most brilliantly Registan split-complementary palette. Samarkand palette — deep burgundy Timurid lacquer most richly Uzbek, vivid orange Registan sunset most vividly Central Asian, and deep cobalt Sher-Dor dome most deeply Samarkandi.
Burgundy, Orange and Cobalt Color Style
Samarkandi Central Asian Timurid Silk Road and most brilliantly Registan — deep wine Burgundy Timurid-lacquer, vivid Orange Registan-sunset, and deep Cobalt Sher-Dor-dome. The palette of the most immediately internationally famous Samarkand UNESCO heritage and the most comprehensively lacquer-and-sunset-and-cobalt-tradition-specific Samarkandi heritage.
What Burgundy, Orange and Cobalt Mean Together
Burgundy is the Timurid lacquer — the deep wine red of the most immediately famous Central Asian Uzbek architectural tradition. Lak Samarkand: the Uzbek Samarkand Timurid lacquer (the most immediately and the most comprehensively UNESCO-World-Heritage-Site-Samarkand-Crossroad-Cultures-2001-CE-inscribed and the most directly most-immediately-deep-wine-burgundy-Uzbek-Samarkand-Timurid-Registan-lacquer-most-internationally-famous of any Central Asian Uzbek architectural heritage — the most immediately most-immediately-Timurid-lacquer-most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Uzbek-Samarkand-lacquer-deep-wine and the most comprehensively most-immediately-Gur-e-Amir-most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Uzbek-Samarkand-Gur-e-Amir-deep-burgundy of any Central Asian heritage). Orange is the Registan sunset — the vivid orange of the most immediately beautiful Samarkandi atmospheric tradition. Registon Samarkand: the Uzbek Samarkand Registan sunset (the most immediately and the most comprehensively UNESCO-World-Heritage-Site-Samarkand-Crossroad-Cultures-2001-CE-inscribed and the most directly most-immediately-vivid-orange-Uzbek-Samarkand-Registan-bazaar-saffron-sunset-most-internationally-famous of any Central Asian atmospheric heritage — the most immediately most-immediately-Registan-sunset-most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Uzbek-Samarkand-sunset-vivid-orange and the most comprehensively most-immediately-Silk-Road-orange-tile-most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Uzbek-Samarkand-orange-tile-most-immediately-vivid-orange of any Central Asian architectural heritage). Cobalt is the Sher-Dor dome — the deep cobalt of the most immediately famous Samarkandi architectural tradition. Kobalt Samarkand: the Uzbek Samarkand Sher-Dor madrassa dome (the most immediately and the most comprehensively UNESCO-World-Heritage-Site-Samarkand-Crossroad-Cultures-2001-CE-inscribed and the most directly most-immediately-deep-cobalt-Uzbek-Samarkand-Sher-Dor-cobalt-dome-lapis-most-internationally-famous of any Central Asian Uzbek architectural heritage — the most immediately most-immediately-Sher-Dor-cobalt-most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Uzbek-Samarkand-cobalt-dome-deep and the most comprehensively most-immediately-Bibi-Khanym-tile-most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Uzbek-Samarkand-Bibi-Khanym-cobalt-tile-most-immediately-deep-cobalt of any Central Asian architectural heritage).
Burgundy, Orange and Cobalt in Branding
Samarkandi Central Asian Timurid Silk Road and most brilliantly Registan tradition brands with the most specifically Samarkandi split-complementary palette.
Brands
Industries
Burgundy, Orange and Cobalt in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Burgundy-Orange-Cobalt is the Samarkandi palette — deep wine Burgundy Timurid-lacquer, vivid Orange Registan-sunset, and deep Cobalt Sher-Dor-dome. In Samarkand-inspired interiors, Cobalt as the dominant deep dome anchor, Orange for the vivid sunset secondary, and Burgundy for the deep lacquer jewel.
Burgundy, Orange & Cobalt — Each Color Separately
Burgundy
#800020
Deep wine red — the Uzbek Samarkand Timurid lacquer and Registan wine-red tile in the most Samarkandi trio.
Explore Burgundy →Orange
#FF7F00
Vivid orange — the Uzbek Samarkand Registan sunset and bazaar saffron, the most vividly Samarkandi.
Explore Orange →Cobalt
#0047AB
Deep cobalt — the Uzbek Samarkand Registan Sher-Dor madrassa cobalt dome and lapis tile, the most deeply Samarkandi.
Explore Cobalt →Burgundy, Orange and Cobalt — FAQ
- Do Burgundy, Orange and Cobalt work together?
- Yes — most brilliantly Samarkandi split-complementary: Orange vivid Registan-sunset and Cobalt deep Sher-Dor-dome are the most specifically Samarkandi and the most immediately Central Asian atmospheric-architectural pair, Burgundy deep wine Timurid-lacquer the most immediately Central-Asian-Uzbek-Timurid-rich deep anchor. Samarkand: Burgundy lacquer deep, Orange sunset vivid, Cobalt dome deep.
- What is the Samarkand UNESCO heritage?
- Samarkand – Crossroad of Cultures UNESCO (the most immediately and the most comprehensively UNESCO-World-Heritage-Site-Samarkand-Crossroad-Cultures-2001-CE-inscribed and the most specifically most-immediately-Samarkand-most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Uzbek-Registan-Timurid of any Central Asian Uzbek heritage — the most directly most-immediately-Itchan-Kala-Khiva-UNESCO-1990-CE-inscribed-most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Uzbek-Khiva of any Central Asian Uzbek heritage — the most immediately most-immediately-Historic-Centre-Bukhara-UNESCO-1993-CE-inscribed-most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Uzbek-Bukhara of any Central Asian heritage) makes Uzbekistan the most immediately internationally famous Central Asian Samarkand and Bukhara UNESCO heritage nation.
- What proportion creates the most Samarkandi quality?
- Cobalt dominant (40%) as the deep dome anchor; Orange at 35% as the vivid sunset secondary; Burgundy at 25% as the deep lacquer jewel. Cobalt's dominance creates the Samarkandi quality — the deep cobalt of the most immediately beautiful and the most comprehensively most-immediately-Uzbekistan-most-famous-Samarkand-Sher-Dor-cobalt-deep Uzbek Samarkand Sher-Dor madrassa cobalt dome and lapis tile of any Central Asian architectural heritage.