Literary notes about SALMON (AI summary)
In literary descriptions, the color salmon is often employed to evoke warmth, vibrancy, and a sense of refined beauty. Writers use phrases like "bright salmon colour" to imbue structures with a joyful, eye-catching appeal, suggesting both energy and elegance in the built environment [1]. Similarly, garments described as "rich salmon-colored" serve to underline a unique style and an air of distinction, while natural imagery such as "flowers small, salmon-red" highlights delicate beauty and subtle warmth in nature [2, 3]. This versatile hue thereby enhances both the physical and emotional landscapes within the narrative.
- The edifice wherein he has established himself, his vehicle and horses, is of a bright salmon colour, rejoiceful to the eyes of the natives.
— from Disturbed IrelandBeing the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81. by Bernard Henry Becker - This one in the rich salmon-colored robe has all our national propensity for travelling.
— from The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 04, February, 1858
A Magazine of Literature, Art, and Politics by Various - Flowers small, salmon-red.
— from The Subtropical Garden; or, beauty of form in the flower garden. by W. (William) Robinson