When Red Met Blue is calm, cool-toned shade of warm blue. It is better contrasting with white. This color combines beautifully with cool yellow, warm cyan or warm red
| Inverse Color | #a9bc8a |
| Complementary Color | #617542 |
| Color Shade: | warm blue (262.8° hue) |
| Color Temperature: | cool |
| Lightness: | 36.08% (better contrasting with white) |
If you're looking for a similar warm blue shade, there are some better alternatives to When Red Met Blue Color. The Classic Waltz color for instance is a lighter and a bit more faded option, however this color has a mid blue bias. Consider a lighter and more saturated alternative called Parfait d'Amour (#734f96) for more energetic effect. Try Emperor Jewel as it also a bit more faded and calm.
#617542 is the best complementary color to When Red Met Blue. Cool yellow shades generally complement the warm blue hues best as they are found on the opposite end of the color wheel. The most popular #564375 complementary color is Dingley, as it offers maximum contrast and grab the viewer's attention.
The analogous palette of cool blue, warm blue, and cool magenta colors offers a soft combination of similar cool shades. The analogous colors of Mulled Wine are #424875 and #6f4275. Thus found on the left and right of #564375 on the color wheel with a 30° gap. Consider matching East Bay and Affair colors as they work well with When Red Met Blue.
The split-complementary When Red Met Blue palette consists of #487542 and #756f42 colors. They can be found 30° apart on either side of the complementary color (#617542). Try Fern Green and Yellow Metal colors in combination with #564375, as they are not as contrasting as a complementary color, hence, giving more hue variety to make your design stand out.
The triadic palette of #564375 offers a combination of cool green and warm red shades and equally high contrast between the three of them. Find triadic colors at the 120° distance from the When Red Met Blue. Thus Killarney and Tobacco Brown giving maximum hue separation to use all three together.
The square color palette of When Red Met Blue contains three additional colors. Thus, complementary Dingley, Ferra, and Faded Jade split by 90° on the color wheel. #564375 square combo is a palette of warm blue, cool red, cool yellow and warm cyan shades that work together well.
The tetradic palette is a bit more complex than the square and has more of a rectangle shape. When Red Met Blue tetradic combo consists of cool yellow complementary color (#617542) and two others. The Tobacco Brown is positioned 120° clockwise from the primary color and Blue Bayoux – 120° from the complementary Dingley. This palette is not recommended to use as-is. Try to tweak the saturation and brightness of #755642 and #426175.
In a RGB color space, hex #564375 is made of 32% red, 25% green and 43% blue. In a HSL mode When Red Met Blue has a hue angle of 262.8°, a saturation of 27.17% and a lightness of 36.08%. In a CMYK space (used in printing only), hex #564375 is made of 12.15% cyan, 19.61% magenta, 0% yellow and 54.12% black ink.
| HEX | #564375 |
| RGB Decimal | rgb(86,67,117) |
| RGB Percentage | 32%, 25%, 43% |
| CMYK | 12.15, 19.61, 0, 54.12 |
| HSL | hsl(262.8,27.17%,36.08%) |
| HSV (or HSB) | hsv(262.8,42.74%,45.88%) |
| CIE-LAB | lab(32.4296,19.6185,-25.7703) |
| XYZ | xyz(9.0558,7.2771,17.7569) |