Dark peony, deep rose, vivid peony, hot pink, pale pink, petal blush, petal white
Dark Peony
#4A0818
rgb(74, 8, 24)
Near-black rose-red — the outermost petal of a dark garden peony in shadow
Deep Rose
#780830
rgb(120, 8, 48)
Dark wine-rose — saturated and rich, like a peony in full shade
Peony Red
#B01050
rgb(176, 16, 80)
Rich red-pink — the classic peony shade at full color depth
Vivid Peony
#D84080
rgb(216, 64, 128)
Vivid mid-pink — open bloom in direct sunlight
Hot Pink
#F070A8
rgb(240, 112, 168)
Bright hot pink — the inner petals catching full light
Pale Pink
#F8A8CC
rgb(248, 168, 204)
Soft, airy pink — the palest outer ring of a light peony variety
Petal Blush
#FCD4E6
rgb(252, 212, 230)
Barely-there blush — white petals with the faintest pink wash
Petal White
#FFF0F6
rgb(255, 240, 246)
Near-white with a cool pink cast — the tip of a white peony petal
The peony is the most photographed garden flower in the world for a reason: a fully open peony bloom contains more tonal variation within a single flower than almost any other species, moving from near-black depth in the tightly folded outer petals through rich saturated rose and vivid pink to almost-white at the innermost petal tips. Wild Peony captures that complete tonal journey in eight steps — the most comprehensive pink-range palette on the site, built to provide full design-system coverage from dark anchors to near-neutral light surfaces.
Dark Peony and Deep Rose at the base are the tones most often overlooked in pink palettes, which tend to start at mid-saturation and skip the dark end entirely. This is a mistake: the near-black and dark wine tones anchor a pink system with the same authority that dark navy anchors a blue system, enabling typography, dark UI elements, and dramatic packaging that reads as premium rather than merely feminine. Peony Red is the first tone that most people would immediately identify as "pink" — rich, fully saturated red-pink at the transition between rose and vivid pink.
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Vivid Peony and Hot Pink represent the open-bloom zone — the most energetic values in the palette, suitable for primary brand colors, highlight accents, and bold typographic treatments. Both are strong enough to carry full-page layouts in fashion and beauty contexts. Pale Pink, Petal Blush, and Petal White provide the lighter half of the system, covering the full range of soft pinks from clearly colored to barely tinted near-white. These lighter values are among the most searched background tones for feminine brand identities, wedding design, and premium beauty e-commerce.
Wild Peony is a complete pink design system for fashion, beauty, fragrance, wedding, and lifestyle brands — one that covers both the bold and the delicate simultaneously. The dark end enables luxury positioning and high-contrast typography, while the light end delivers the softness and romance that the category demands. For interior design, the palette maps cleanly onto a full pink room scheme: Dark Peony and Deep Rose for statement cabinetry or upholstery, Vivid Peony and Hot Pink for decor and art, Pale Pink through Petal White for walls, linens, and trim.
Designers building digital products in the beauty, wellness, or bridal space will find this palette especially practical — the eight steps provide enough variation to support multi-tier UI hierarchy within a single pink family, from dark navigation elements and primary CTAs down to card surfaces and page backgrounds, without reaching for neutral grays to fill the value gaps.