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Spring Bloom

Pale mint, lime whisper, peach blossom, rose blossom, sky petal
Pale Mint
#D6F5D6
rgb(214, 245, 214)
Light pastel green — the first soft green of spring foliage
Lime Whisper
#E8FFD6
rgb(232, 255, 214)
Warm pastel yellow-green — fresh new growth in earliest spring
Peach Blossom
#FFEFD6
rgb(255, 239, 214)
Warm pastel peach-cream — the soft orange-pink of cherry blossoms
Rose Blossom
#FFD6D6
rgb(255, 214, 214)
Pale pastel rose-pink — the quintessential spring flower pink
Sky Petal
#D6EEFF
rgb(214, 238, 255)
Soft pastel blue — spring sky glimpsed between flowering branches

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Spring Bloom covers more of the visible spectrum than most pastel palettes, moving from the yellow-green of Lime Whisper through warm neutral Peach Blossom and pink Rose Blossom, with Pale Mint extending the cool-green range and Sky Petal providing the blue counterpoint. This wide-spectrum approach — essentially a complete soft rainbow — reflects the actual experience of spring in bloom: a garden in April does not have a single dominant color but a polyphonic arrangement of greens, pinks, yellows, and blues coexisting at the same soft intensity level.

The specific lightness levels in Spring Bloom are chosen to prevent any single color from dominating when the five are used together. Pale Mint and Lime Whisper are the most luminous; Peach Blossom sits at comfortable mid-value; Rose Blossom and Sky Petal are slightly cooler and more visually receding. This natural visual hierarchy — warm greens in the foreground, pinks and blues receding — mirrors how the eye moves through a real garden, following the brightest elements first.

Sponsors

Spring Bloom works across a wide range of seasonal and nature-themed applications: Easter and spring holiday branding, floral shops and garden center marketing, botanical skincare and natural cosmetics, seasonal food packaging for spring releases, and children's spring clothing and toy brands. The palette is deliberately non-gender-coded — the green-to-peach-to-pink-to-blue range lacks the strong feminist pink or masculine blue signal of more restricted palettes, making it appropriate for universal spring branding.

In digital interfaces, Spring Bloom provides an effective five-state color system for categorical differentiation — each of a product range's five categories could cleanly map to one of the five palette values without any value reading as more important than the others. The five colors are sufficiently distinct for categorical encoding in charts and diagrams, while their shared pastel lightness level ensures that the categories read as peers rather than hierarchy — a useful property for product families, navigation tabs, and tag systems where democratic differentiation is preferred over emphasis.

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