Deep mauve, dusty rose, muted blush, powder mauve, pale linen
Deep Mauve
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rgb(107, 56, 72)
Dark, grayed rose — earthy and restrained
Dusty Rose
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rgb(152, 112, 128)
Classic dusty rose — the definitive gray-pink of vintage aesthetics
Muted Blush
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rgb(196, 154, 168)
Soft grayed blush — a quiet, restful mid-tone
Powder Mauve
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rgb(223, 200, 208)
Pale powder pink with a gray cast — elegant and airy
Pale Linen
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rgb(244, 235, 240)
Warm near-white with a whisper of pink — fine linen with a blush tone
Mauve Study explores the softer, more introspective end of the pink family — pinks that have been desaturated and grayed, tilted away from vivid sweetness toward quiet, contemplative tones. The name mauve originally referred to a pale purple-pink, but in contemporary usage it describes the full family of grayed, vintage-influenced pinks. These are the colors of faded Victorian wallpaper, antique rose gardens, and linen wardrobe interiors.
The palette spans a meaningful tonal range: Deep Mauve is dark enough to read as a sophisticated accent color in its own right, with the warmth of rose and the gravity of charcoal. Dusty Rose is the anchor — arguably the most recognizable and searched tone in this family, appearing consistently in interior design, fashion, and packaging searches. The lighter tones step gently toward pale linen, maintaining the gray-pink quality throughout.
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Mauve Study works best in contexts that benefit from restraint and refinement: luxury branding, wellness and spa design, editorial fashion, upscale hospitality, and residential interior design. It carries strong associations with femininity without feeling aggressive — useful for brands that need to reference the pink family while maintaining a premium or mature aesthetic. It pairs naturally with warm creams, soft grays, antique golds, and sage greens.
For typography and UI design, Deep Mauve provides adequate contrast against pale backgrounds for body text and headings, while remaining warmer and more characterful than standard gray text. The mid-range values function well as card and surface colors in design systems, and Pale Linen serves as an alternative to pure white for backgrounds where warmth is preferred over clinical brightness.