Scarlet
#FF2400
Orange
#FF7F00
Beige
#F5F0DC
Scarlet & Orange & Beige
Scarlet, Orange and Beige Color Trio — Meaning, Palette, Style & Design
AnalogousScarlet, Orange and Beige Color Meaning
The palette captures the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively ancient-Phoenician-Carthaginian-and-Roman-North-African-UNESCO-tradition-specific of all the Tunisian Mediterranean heritage regions: ancient Carthage and Tunis Medina — the most immediately internationally famous and the most comprehensively UNESCO-World-Heritage-Site-Site-of-Carthage-1979-CE-inscribed-and-Medina-of-Tunis-1979-CE-inscribed of any Tunisian UNESCO heritage — the most directly and the most immediately most-important-ancient-Phoenician-and-Roman-North-African-city-tradition and the most comprehensively most-immediately-famous-ancient-rivalry-with-Rome-Punic-Wars of any ancient North African civilization.
Scarlet is the ancient Carthage Roman mosaic — the vivid brilliant red of the most immediately famous Bardo National Museum mosaic collection. Orange is the Tunis Medina souk sandstone — the vivid warm orange of the most immediately characteristic Tunisian medina market warm terracotta and sandstone building material. Beige is the ancient Carthage Roman limestone — the most immediately pale warm beige of the most immediately characteristic ancient Carthaginian and Roman North African building stone.
Scarlet, Orange and Beige in Design
Vivid brilliant Scarlet, vivid warm Orange, and pale warm Beige create the most Tunisian Carthage Roman and most brilliantly North African analogous palette. Carthage palette — brilliant scarlet Bardo-Roman-mosaic most vividly North African, vivid warm orange Tunis Medina souk sandstone most brilliantly Maghrebi, and pale warm beige ancient Carthage Roman limestone most softly Tunisian.
Scarlet, Orange and Beige Color Style
Tunisian Carthage Roman and most brilliantly North African — vivid brilliant Scarlet Bardo-Roman-mosaic, vivid warm Orange Tunis-Medina-sandstone, and pale warm Beige ancient-Carthage-limestone. The palette of the most immediately internationally famous Phoenician and Roman North African heritage and the most comprehensively Carthage-UNESCO-and-Bardo-Roman-mosaic-tradition-specific Tunisian heritage.
What Scarlet, Orange and Beige Mean Together
Scarlet is the Carthage Roman mosaic — the vivid brilliant red of the most immediately famous North African Roman art collection. Bardo National Museum: the Bardo National Museum — Musée national du Bardo (the most immediately and the most comprehensively world's-largest-collection-of-Roman-mosaics-Tunisia-specifically and the most directly approximately-33,000-square-meters-museum-space and the most immediately most-comprehensive-Roman-North-African-mosaic-collection-specifically of any world museum — the most comprehensively most-immediately-beautiful-Roman-mosaics including: the most immediately Virgil-mosaic — the most specifically 3rd-century-CE-poet-Virgil-between-Clio-and-Melpomene-muses-depicting and the most comprehensively most-internationally-famous-single-Roman-mosaic-artwork of any museum collection; and the Ulysses-and-the-Sirens-mosaic — the most immediately most-dramatically-beautiful and the most specifically most-vividly-scarlet-and-orange-colored of any Bardo Roman mosaic). Orange is the Tunis Medina — the vivid warm orange of the most immediately famous North African market city. Tunis Medina: the Medina of Tunis (the most immediately and the most comprehensively UNESCO-World-Heritage-Site-1979-CE-inscribed of any Tunisian medina — the most directly and the most immediately most-important-medieval-Maghrebi-city-center and the most specifically Zitouna-Mosque-and-covered-souk-and-palace-medina-ensemble-tradition-specific of any North African UNESCO medina — the most immediately most-immediately-beautifully-warm-orange-terracotta-tile-and-sandstone-arcade-souk-architecture and the most comprehensively most-immediately-labyrinthine-and-most-immediately-fragrant-Jasmine-and-spice-souk-tradition of any Tunisian urban heritage — the most directly and the most immediately Souk-des-Chéchias-red-fez-hat-making-tradition and the most comprehensively most-immediately-famous-Tunisian-traditional-craft of any Tunis Medina souk tradition). Beige is the Carthage limestone — the pale warm beige of the most immediately ancient North African building material. Ancient Carthage: the ancient city of Carthage (the most immediately and the most comprehensively UNESCO-World-Heritage-Site-1979-CE-inscribed and the most specifically Phoenician-Queen-Dido-Elissa-traditionally-814-BCE-founding of any North African ancient city — the most directly and the most immediately most-important-ancient-Mediterranean-trading-city-before-Rome-defeating and the most comprehensively Punic-Wars-three-specifically-264-BCE-241-BCE-218-BCE-201-BCE-149-BCE-146-BCE of any ancient Mediterranean military conflict — the most immediately pale-warm-Carthaginian-limestone-ruins and the most specifically Antonine-Baths-most-impressive-surviving-Roman-Carthage-monument and the most comprehensively most-immediately-large-Roman-bath-complex-outside-Rome-specifically of any North African Roman bath tradition).
Scarlet, Orange and Beige in Branding
Tunisian Carthage Roman and most brilliantly North African tradition brands with the most specifically Carthage analogous palette.
Brands
Industries
Scarlet, Orange and Beige in Fashion & Interior
In fashion, Scarlet-Orange-Beige is the Carthage Tunisian palette — vivid brilliant Scarlet Bardo-Roman-mosaic, vivid warm Orange Tunis-Medina-sandstone, and pale warm Beige ancient-Carthage-limestone. In Carthaginian-North-African-inspired interiors, Beige as the dominant pale warm limestone anchor, Orange for the warm sandstone secondary, and Scarlet for the brilliant mosaic warm jewel.
Scarlet, Orange & Beige — Each Color Separately
Scarlet
#FF2400
Vivid brilliant red — the Roman mosaic in the most Tunisian Carthage trio.
Explore Scarlet →Orange
#FF7F00
Vivid warm orange — the Tunis Medina souk warm sandstone, the most brilliantly Maghrebi.
Explore Orange →Beige
#F5F0DC
Pale warm beige — the ancient Carthage Roman limestone, the most softly Tunisian.
Explore Beige →Scarlet, Orange and Beige — FAQ
- Do Scarlet, Orange and Beige work together?
- Yes — most earthily Tunisian Carthage analogous: Orange vivid warm Medina-sandstone and Beige pale warm Carthage-limestone are the most specifically North African and the most immediately Tunisian architectural-archaeological pair, Scarlet brilliant Bardo-Roman-mosaic the most immediately artistic-vivid warm. Carthage Tunisia: Scarlet mosaic brilliant, Orange sandstone vivid warm, Beige limestone pale warm.
- What were the Punic Wars and Carthage's fall?
- The Punic Wars (the most immediately and the most comprehensively ancient-world's-most-decisive-series-of-conflicts and the most specifically three-wars-264-BCE-241-BCE-First-Punic-War-Sicily-218-BCE-201-BCE-Second-Punic-War-Hannibal-149-BCE-146-BCE-Third-Punic-War-specifically of any ancient Mediterranean military conflict tradition) culminated in: (1) Hannibal Barca (the most immediately and the most comprehensively most-famous-Carthaginian-general and the most specifically Second-Punic-War-218-BCE-Alps-crossing-with-war-elephants-most-immediately-famous of any ancient military campaign — the most directly and the most immediately Cannae-216-BCE-most-impressive-tactical-victory and the most comprehensively approximately-70,000-Roman-soldiers-killed-most-immediately-devastating-Roman-defeat of any ancient Mediterranean battle); (2) The fall of Carthage (the most immediately 146-BCE-Roman-General-Scipio-Aemilianus-completely-destroying and the most comprehensively salt-the-earth-Carthage-tradition-most-immediately-famous — though: the most directly and the most immediately most-immediately-historically-debated whether Romans actually salted the earth of the most specifically most-famous-ancient-city-destruction-myth of any ancient Mediterranean city).
- What proportion creates the most Carthage Tunisian quality?
- Beige dominant (50%) as the pale warm ancient-limestone anchor; Orange at 30% as the vivid warm Medina-sandstone secondary; Scarlet at 20% as the brilliant Roman-mosaic jewel. Beige's dominance creates the Carthage Tunisian quality — the pale warm beige of the most immediately characteristic ancient North African building stone and the most comprehensively most-beautiful-archaeological-ruin-limestone-color of any Tunisian UNESCO heritage site.