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Colors that enhance royal purple

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Royal purple color palettes and color scheme combinations

Royal purple color palettes and color scheme combinations. Find what colors go with Royal purple color palettes and color scheme combinations. Explore monochromatic, analogous, complementary schemes. Inspiring color palette and combination for your next design.

Royal purple - Monochromatic Color Palettes

Royal purple - Complementary Color Palettes

Royal purple - Split-Complementary Color Palettes

Royal purple - Triadic Color Palettes

Royal purple - Tetradic Color Palettes

Royal purple - Hexadic Color Palettes

Colors that go with Royal purple – Color palettes and coordinating colors

Here are the few coordinating colors that go with Royal purple Crayola Crayons.
Click on the hex color code or color name below to find more similar colors and matching paints from brands like Behr, Sherwin Williams, PPG Paints, Benjamin Moore, Valspar, Dunn-Edwards, etc.

According to monochromatic scheme, color that go with Crayola Crayons Royal purple

Black (#000000)
Eigengrau* (#09050e)
Dark Purple* (#221432)
Russian Violet* (#3a2257)
Deep Lilac* (#8456bc)
Lavender Purple* (#9f7acb)
Light Pastel Purple* (#b99fd9)
Pale Lavender* (#d4c3e8)
Magnolia White* (#eee8f6)

According to analogous scheme, color that go with Crayola Crayons Royal purple

Bice Blue* (#3f74a0)
Violet Blue* (#3f43a0)
Purpureus (Purpura)* (#9c3fa0)
Maximum Red Purple* (#a03f74)

According to complementary scheme, color that go with Crayola Crayons Royal purple

Light Aloe Green* (#74a03f)

Color Name: Royal purple
Hex Color Code: #6B3FA0
RGB Color Code: RGB(107, 63, 160)

Royal purple Color Scheme Palettes

Right click and use “Save image as” option to download “Royal purple color scheme palette”.

Monochromatic Color Palette

Monochromatic colors belong to the same hue angle but different tints and shades. Monochromatic color palette can be generated by keeping the exact hue of the base color and then changing the saturation and lightness.

Analogous Color Palette

Analogous colors are a group of colors adjacent to each other on a color wheel. Group of these adjacent colors forms Analogous color scheme Palette. Analogous Palette can be generated by increasing or decreasing the hue value by 30 points.

Triadic and Triadic Color Scheme Palette

Here is the Triadic and Tetradic Color Scheme of Royal purple. The triadic color palette has three colors separated by 120° in the RGB color wheel and tetradic colour scheme composed of two sets of complementary colors in a rectangular shape on the color wheel.

Hexadic Color Palette

Hexadic color scheme palette is derived from drawing a hexagon on a color wheel. The palette contains three pairs of complementary colors, each colors are separated by a 120-degree hue angle.

Complementary Color Palette

Complementary color combination is composed using two colors opposite each other on the color wheel. Then the color palette is be generated by changing the lightness/brightness of these two colors.

Split-Complementary Color Palette

Split-Complementary color combination contains three colors, a base color and secondary colors of complementary color.

Purple for Springs

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Style notes: Your Purple can be anything from softest Wisteria all the way to vibrant Vivid Violet, but the classic Spring Purple is surely Violet, with its perfect balance of lightness and freshness. Pair it with Geranium Pink for a pretty look, or opt for bold Island Green or Lemon Yellow for a more statement high contrast look.

Purple for Summers

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Style notes: Purple was surely made for Summers. Soft smoky shades abound, from deepest plums to palest lilacs. Pair your colours tonally, as we’ve done here, for an effortlessly colourful look, or opt for a simple purple colour pop against a Navy and Soft White outfit backdrop.

Purple for Autumns

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Style notes: Autumn might feel like perhaps the least obvious seasonal palette for Purple to sit in, but in reality you have a collection of rich, warm and deep version of Purple to choose from. Royal Purple and Cassis feel rich and opulent, while Heliotrope feels more delicate and pretty. Pair your Purple with warm shades like Copper and Cinnamon if you suit warmer shades in your palette best.

Yotel

Georgina Oakley

Outline of Queen's head with purple background

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In honour of The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee in 2022, we’re looking into our own royal connection and exploring all things purple. As a UK born company with a global presence, we’re proud to be celebrating this milestone from the heart of London! Read on for why purple is considered the colour of royalty and what it means to YOTEL.
WHAT IS ROYAL PURPLE?

Also known as Tyrian purple, imperial purple or imperial dye, the shade is made by mixing red and blue hues. Royal Purple was officially launched as a Crayola crayon colour in 1990.

DID THE QUEEN START THE ROYAL PURPLE TREND?

Purple’s association as the colour of royalty and wealth dates way back to ancient realms. Cyrus the Great – founder and king of the first Persian Empire – wore a purple tunic as his royal uniform. In Roman times, it was reserved exclusively for the Emperor – some even punished their citizens if they wore any shade of the colour! Similarly, during the Elizabethan era, Queen Elizabeth I set laws that permitted only her close relatives to wear purple. The Queen’s father – George VI – wore purple in his official portrait and the colour also featured prominently in her own coronation 70 years ago.

WHY WAS PURPLE CHOSEN AS THE COLOUR TO REFLECT ROYALTY?

For centuries, purple dye was particularly hard to get hold of as textiles could only be coloured with natural dyes. To make the first purple shades, dye-makers had to crush the shells of a species of sea snail, extract its purple mucus and then expose it to the sun for a specific period. The process made the colour so scarce and expensive that wearing it was a symbol of status and wealth.

WHEN DID PURPLE BECOME MORE MAINSTREAM?

The first synthetic dyes were created in the 1850s after which the colour became much easier and cheaper to make. In fact mauve – a shade of purple – was the first commercially successful synthetic colour. Purple has since come to symbolise a whole host of other things, from spirituality, harmony and magic, to Cadbury Dairy Milk, the 1980s cult classic The Colour Purple, and of course…YOTEL!

WHY DID YOTEL CHOOSE PURPLE?

Purple has always been YOTEL’s signature colour and you’ll see the distinctive shade across all our hotels and platforms. We chose a vibrant shade that is playful and fun – elements that define who we are.

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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