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Pink wedding flowers Color Palette

This photograph combines several favorite elements of a wedding day: a lush bouquet of vibrant pink and fuchsia flowers, elegant bridal heels laid nearby, and soft fabric in the background. The image is unapologetically pink and vivid, and the palette reflects that — including a near-electric fuchsia that is one of the most saturated colors you will find in a floral photograph. Deep burgundy grounds the palette at the darkest point, and the progression works through lavender and mauve to a soft periwinkle blue where the paler background tones register.

Pink wedding flowers color palette

Credit: NGDPhotoworks on Pixabay

Colors in This Palette

Cerulean
#33414F
rgb(51, 65, 79)
Burgundy
#672A46
rgb(103, 42, 70)
Lavender
#E239B8
rgb(226, 57, 184)
Mauve
#B76D99
rgb(183, 109, 153)
Lavender 2
#D2ADC9
rgb(210, 173, 201)
Periwinkle
#E1E3F2
rgb(225, 227, 242)

The palette spans a wide range for a floral photograph — from the near-black depth of burgundy through vivid fuchsia to the airy softness of periwinkle and pale lavender. The vivid fuchsia is the anchor of the set in terms of visual weight and saturation, even though it sits in the middle of the range tonally. Cerulean — listed first — comes from the darker background areas where the blue-gray of fabric or wall registers as a cool neutral. Together, these six shades span warm pink and cool blue in a palette that feels vibrant and confident.

Sponsors

For weddings, this palette reflects a bold, maximalist approach to color. The fuchsia-and-lavender combination is particularly fashionable in contemporary wedding design, often seen in lush floral installations, bold invitation suites, and bridesmaid dress pairings. It works especially well for spring, summer, and tropical destination ceremonies. The burgundy anchors the palette in a way that keeps the vibrant pinks from reading as too youthful or casual.

In fashion, editorial, and digital design, fuchsia is having a significant cultural moment and this palette provides the supporting tones to make it work as a full color system. Mauve and lavender offer softer options for secondary elements, while cerulean provides cool contrast when the warm pinks need balance. The palette performs well in social media graphics, event branding, and any application where standing out is more important than blending in.