Pale iris lavender at the petal's thinnest translucent edge
Iris Yellow
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The vivid yellow signal at the throat of many bearded iris varieties
White Petal
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Near-white of iris falls in white or palest lavender varieties
Bearded iris are among the most color-complex flowers in cultivation — individual blooms can contain three to five distinct hues simultaneously, with the upward-pointing standard petals and downward-falling fall petals often in different color registers, and many varieties incorporating a vivid contrasting yellow or orange "signal" at the throat where nectar guides attract pollinators. Iris Garden captures this floral complexity in six tones: the four-step purple range from deep iris shadow to pale petal, plus the yellow signal and near-white that complete the flower's full color vocabulary.
Deep Iris and Iris Blue are the blue-dominant purples of the lower petal falls — the richest, most saturated values in many classic iris varieties, where the flower's color is most intense at the base and in shadow. Purple Iris lightens the register as the petal moves toward its backlit edge, and Pale Iris reaches the lavender-pale tones of the thinnest, most translucent petal tissue at the outer margins of the flower.
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Iris Yellow is the palette's dramatic departure — the vivid, fully saturated yellow that appears as the signal at the throat of many bearded iris, functioning as a pollinator guide and creating the intense complementary contrast between purple and yellow that makes bearded iris so visually striking. In design terms, this yellow functions as an accent that activates the entire purple range when used judiciously, creating the complementary contrast energy that professional color designers use to make purple palettes feel alive rather than monotone. White Petal provides the near-neutral light value needed to balance strong applications of either the purple or yellow tones.
Iris Garden serves botanical and horticultural brands, garden design and landscape architecture, spring fashion editorial, luxury fragrance and perfumery, and any design context where the refined, complex, slightly aristocratic associations of the iris flower — the symbol of France, the reference in Van Gogh's most reproduced paintings — are appropriate and valuable.