Definitions Related words Phrases (New!) Mentions Colors (New!)
Color:
Pale blue


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Obsidian
Charleston green
Dark Teal
Deep Sea Green
Dark slate gray
Skobeloff
Teal
Elm
Dark cyan
Viridian green
Ocean Teal
Robin egg blue
Dark turquoise
Maximum Blue Green
Aqua
Cyan
Spanish sky blue
Serene Aqua
Luminous Silver
Pale turquoise
Nearby colors:
Celeste
Italian sky blue
Waterspout
Gentle Aqua
Light Aqua
Ice Blue
Aquamarine 
Light cyan
Powder blue
Crystal
Arctic Blue
Tiffany Blue
Electric blue
Airy Aqua
Drizzle
Azure 
Winter Mint
Pale robin egg blue
Words evoked by this color:
iceberg,  methane,  hydrogen,  ague,  inhaling,  mist,  laxity,  lackadaisical,  passivity,  hypotonic,  asthenia,  pleurisy,  hypotensive,  windy,  thawing,  thaw,  neatly,  anaesthetic,  anaesthesia,  dovish,  anesthetized,  hyperventilation,  sparing,  tearful,  rinsed,  lacrimal,  ectoderm,  feint,  weakened,  thinned,  hypoglycemia,  anesthetic,  acquaintance,  hypoglycemic,  hypoglycaemia,  hypotension,  sniffle,  diminution,  immunocompromised,  dilution,  lessened,  lessening,  attenuate,  lessen,  estimation,  acquaintances,  hypochondriac,  vasoconstriction,  spindrift,  adrift
Literary analysis:
In literature, pale blue is often employed to evoke an atmosphere of calmness, elegance, and subtle intricacy. It appears in descriptions of sumptuous fabrics—like velvet and chiffon—that imbue garments with a refined delicacy ([1], [2], [3]), and it is frequently used to describe eyes which suggest both vulnerability and intensity ([4], [5], [6], [7]). Beyond character details, pale blue colors natural settings and objects; for instance, authors depict clear skies and serene landscapes imbued with a gentle luminescence ([8], [9], [10], [11]) or use the color to highlight the soft glow of light and water ([12], [13], [14]). This versatile hue, bridging the realms of human detail and nature’s ambiance, serves as an evocative element to enhance mood and imagery throughout literary works.
  1. she hadn't got to upstairs yet, but she must just take a peep and see the silver bedstead, all hung with pale blue velvet.
    — from Quicksilver Sue by Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards
  2. But now,” and she shrugged her shoulders, half-hidden in their pale blue chiffon, the movement causing her diamonds to gleam with fiery iridescence.
    — from Whoso Findeth a Wife by William Le Queux
  3. Patty was looking lovely in pale blue chiffon with tiny French rosebuds of pink satin adorning it here and there.
    — from Patty's Social Season by Carolyn Wells
  4. Returning faster than he came, his large white cheeks were slightly flushed; his pale blue eyes wore a startled look.
    — from Geoffrey Strong by Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards
  5. Nearly all were dark; olive faces, black hair, and black pointed beards, but now and then one had fair hair, and eyes of a cold, pale blue.
    — from The Free Rangers: A Story of the Early Days Along the Mississippi by Joseph A. (Joseph Alexander) Altsheler
  6. So did some of the men, notably David Campbell, who passed from one group to another, his pale blue eyes a-glisten with enthusiasm.
    — from The Hosts of the Lord by Flora Annie Webster Steel
  7. Muriel sprang up when she heard the door close and in her pale blue eyes there was an expression of hatred when she saw who had entered the room.
    — from Nan of the Gypsies by Grace May North
  8. Not a leaf stirred on the trees; the sky was of a clear, pale blue; there was just a faint touch of frost in the air.
    — from Girls New and Old by L. T. Meade
  9. The sun was warmer now on the bright waters of the Frith, and the distant haze over the pale blue mountains beyond had grown more luminous.
    — from Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, Vol. 12, No. 32, November, 1873 by Various
  10. The weather opened finely the next morning; the sky a pretty pale blue, and the sea calm and beautiful.
    — from Fair Italy, the Riviera and Monte Carlo Comprising a Tour Through North and South Italy and Sicily with a Short Account of Malta by W. Cope Devereux
  11. Overhead the autumn sky was a vault of pale blue; and a bird or two chirped briskly from the roof opposite.
    — from The King's Achievement by Robert Hugh Benson
  12. The light is pale blue.
    — from The Life Radiant by Lilian Whiting
  13. [120] Set in a basin of pure white silica, delicately carved and fretted, lay a pool of pale blue water, so pure in colour, so opaque in substance.
    — from Forty Thousand Miles Over Land and Water The Journal of a Tour Through the British Empire and America by Ethel Gwendoline Vincent
  14. He drew a glass rod from his pocket, the tip of which glowed with a pale blue light.
    — from Astounding Stories of Super-Science, October, 1930 by Various



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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