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Color:
Flax


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Antique bronze
Peat
Muddy Yellow
Brass
Citrine
Turmeric
Dingy Yellow
Middle yellow
Dazzling Yellow
Aureolin
Banana
Buttercup
Buff
Shandy
Vanilla
Butter
Soft White
Morning Mist
Buttermilk
Perlino
Parchment
Eggshell
Cornsilk
Similar colors:
Buff
Jasmine
Straw
Soft Gold
Dingy Yellow
Shandy
Canary
Lanzones
Custard
Banana
Soft Yellow
Dark khaki
Vanilla
Turmeric
Buttermilk
Quiet Olive
Naples yellow
Oat
Palomino
Butter
Sallow
Brass
Topaz
Mustard
Very pale yellow
Old gold
Sunny Gold
Blonde
Peach
Metallic gold
Words evoked by this color:
buffon,  dakota,  wheatear,  nankeen,  buffy,  poultry,  mell,  khartoum,  topee,  1914-18,  explorer,  expedition,  safari,  crikey,  kruger,  colonel,  tilley,  rhodesian,  ypres,  pant,  britches,  irwin,  popcorn,  butterfield,  straw,  thatcher,  manger,  incubator,  incubating,  incubated,  incubate,  felicitous,  prosecco,  moet,  highlife,  luxe,  sybarite,  sybaritic,  luxurious,  dawning,  antioch,  semblance,  buddha,  aurobindo,  gautama,  mahayana,  arhat,  diwali,  sunni,  snitch
Literary analysis:
Literary writers have employed “flax” as a subtle yet evocative color descriptor, drawing on the natural, pale hue of flax fibers to convey softness, fragility, or an almost ethereal brightness. In some passages, a character’s hair is compared to flax to emphasize a luminous, almost silvery-white quality, suggesting both delicacy and purity [1][2]. In another instance, the term appears in the inventive coinage “flax‑blue,” highlighting a unique, gentle tint that blends the familiar lightness of flax with a cool, nuanced blue [3]. Yet another author uses flax as a yardstick for pallor, describing a widow as growing “paler than the flax on her shuttle,” thereby intensifying the sense of wan, ghostly fragility [4]. These varied uses illustrate how “flax” transcends its literal botanical meaning to serve as a subtle simile in the literary portrayal of delicate and nuanced color.
  1. Jeannette, sat spinning in the corner behind him; she had large black eyes, and her hair was so white that it looked like flax.
    — from The Catholic World, Vol. 17, April, 1873 to September, 1873 A Monthly Magazine of General Literature and Science by Various
  2. The hair like flax, blood-dabbled!” “Oh, madame!”
    — from Chivalry: Dizain des Reines by James Branch Cabell
  3. To her new-fangled dress, frilly about the hips and tight below the knees, June took a sudden liking—a charming colour, flax-blue.
    — from The Forsyte Saga - Complete by John Galsworthy
  4. The widow grew paler than the flax on her shuttle.
    — from The Last Vendée; or, the She-Wolves of Machecoul by Alexandre Dumas


Colors associated with the word:
Beige
Cream
Ecru
Ivory
Linen
Off-White
Pale Yellow
Sand
Wheat
Buff
Khaki  
Champagne
Vanilla
Almond
Oatmeal
Bone
Taupe
Fawn
Words with similar colors:
oatmeal,  tuffet,  khadi,  fat,  ecru,  cot,  wheat,  cocoon,  tendon,  yeast,  alpaca,  scallop,  nappy,  bailey,  fawning,  pabulum,  parchment,  dumpling,  artless,  ginseng
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This tab, the new OneLook "color thesaurus", is a work in progress. It draws from a data set of more than 2000 color names gathered from sources around the Web, and an analysis of how they are referenced in English texts. Some words, like "peach", function as both a color name and an object; when you do a search for words like these, you will see both of the above sections.



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