Definitions Related words Mentions Colors (New!)
Color:
Soft Lavender


More info:
ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Navy blue
Dark blue
Raisin
Ultramarine
Medium blue
Blue
Blazing Purple
Ultr
Deep Purple
Intense Purple
Soft Purple
Similar colors:
Pale lavender
Soap
Faded Lavender
Misty Lavender
Light Lilac
Soft Purple
Periwinkle
Thistle
Shimmer
Lilac
Wisteria
Magnolia
Cloud
Silver
Light Gray
Faint Pink
Stainless Steel
Light silver
Sparkling Silver
Gainsboro
Whisper
Chrome
Mercury
Dark gray 
Striking Silver
Quick silver
Ethereal White
Shell
Haze
Marble White
Words evoked by this color:
embrace,  meredith,  palliate,  palliation,  massage,  hummed,  doze,  comforting,  harmoniously,  bethany,  supple,  adagio,  ambience,  palliative,  ambiance,  recent,  22-23,  bemused,  flummoxed,  peradventure,  perivascular,  winkle,  periwinkle,  perchance,  plumbago,  perdy,  chortle,  dilly-dally,  gentian,  perambulate,  per,  permeability,  perpetuate,  perpendicular,  improbable,  quizzical,  surprisingly,  uniquely,  unique,  infrequently,  renovated,  loft,  pumice,  receding,  scattered,  reduced,  minor,  defuse,  prefatory,  manageable
Literary analysis:
The hue "soft lavender" is often employed to evoke a sense of delicate beauty and understated charm in literature. In descriptions of nature, such as in [1] and [2], authors use soft lavender to depict the gentle, ephemeral quality of blooming flora that graces the landscape, suggesting both renewal and transience. This same subtle color appears in evocations of the natural environment itself, as seen in [3], where soft lavender helps to cast a surreal, almost dreamlike atmosphere over wild, undulating mountain scenes. Additionally, in portrayals of human surroundings and attire—as in [4], [5], and [6]—soft lavender serves to highlight a refined, tranquil elegance, whether draped over a piece of furniture or woven into the fabric of a tea-gown or cashmere garment, thereby enriching the narrative with visual warmth and emotional softness.
  1. In late spring the dry, open hills of the south are overrun with the soft lavender of the Chorizanthe .
    — from The Wild Flowers of California: Their Names, Haunts, and Habits by Mary Elizabeth Parsons
  2. The two colorings are due to the fact that the flowers are a soft lavender blue when they open but fade to almost pure white before they fall.
    — from Hawaiian Flowers by Richard C. Tongg
  3. Nothing could be more charming than the soft lavender billows of it undulating over slope after slope of wild mountain-side.
    — from The Wild Flowers of California: Their Names, Haunts, and Habits by Mary Elizabeth Parsons
  4. "Then I hustled 'Leven into the parlour where Jennie was layin' under the soft lavender cloth.
    — from Friendship Village by Zona Gale
  5. And there, of all occupations in the world, Mrs. Lancaster, clad in a soft lavender tea-gown, was engaged in mending old clothes.
    — from Gordon Keith by Thomas Nelson Page
  6. She was dressed in rather a superior fashion to most of the countrywomen, in soft lavender cashmere which fitted her slight, tall figure admirably.
    — from 'Doc.' Gordon by Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman

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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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