The Aurora after Cherubic Igniting

#bb59fd RGB(187,89,253)

About this color

The Aurora after Cherubic Igniting carries its coordinates at #bb59fd: a light violet with intense saturation.

#bb59fdRGB(187, 89, 253)

HSL 276° · 98% saturation · 67% lightness

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Psychology

Pale violet sits at the intersection of calm and creativity — neither demanding nor recessive.

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History

Mauveine, the first synthetic dye, was discovered by accident in 1856 by eighteen-year-old William Perkin — a purple that sparked an industrial revolution in colour.

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Design use

With its high lightness, this tone is ideal as backgrounds, cards, and large surface areas where readability of dark text is the priority. It recedes quietly, allowing content to take the lead.

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Colour pairings

For palette building, violet finds its complement in yellow-green — a combination that feels both botanical and somewhat surreal. Softer companions include warm greys, dusty pinks, and aged golds.

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Color Categories

Color formats

Name
The Aurora after Cherubic Igniting
HEX
#bb59fd
RGB
rgb(187,89,253)
RGB%
rgb(73.3%,34.9%,99.2%)
HSL
hsl(276,98%,67%)
HSV
hsv(276,65%,99%)
CMYK
cmyk(26,65,0,1)
LAB
lab(57,66,-66)
LCH
lch(57,93,315)
sRGB
(0.733,0.349,0.992)
HEX8
#bb59fdff
CSS Name
Decimal
187089253

Similar colors

Color variants

Color info

Lightness
67%
Saturation
98%
Hue
276°
Chroma
93
Temperature
WarmCool
Contrast Preview
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

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