The hexadecimal RGB code of Old Mauve color is #673147. This code is composed of a hexadecimal 67 red (103/256), a 31 green (49/256) and a 47 blue component (71/256). The decimal RGB color code is rgb(103,49,71).
Mauve Mauve (/ˈmoʊv/ (listen), mohv; /ˈmɔːv/ (listen), mawv) is a pale purple color named after the mallow flower (French: mauve). The first use of the word
Wine (color) fraternities. The normalized color coordinates for wine dregs are identical to oldmauve, which was first recorded as a color name in English in 1925. Fashion
List of colors (compact) boat blue Ochre Office green Old burgundy Old gold Old heliotrope Old lace Old lavender OldmauveOld moss green Old rose Old silver Olive Olive drab (#3)
List of colors: N–Z 90% 39° 85% 95% 9% 99% Old lavender #796878 47% 41% 47% 304° 8% 44% 14% 47% Oldmauve #673147 40% 19% 28% 336° 36% 30% 52% 40% Old rose #C08081 75% 50%
Shades of purple "Mauveine" was named after the mauve colored mallow flower, even though it is a much deeper tone of purple than mauve. The term "Mauve" in the late 19th century
WhistlePig second generation of pigs kept on-site. The first generation, Mortimer and Mauve, died in 2014 and 2018. Their cremated remains are held in a granite obelisk
Mauve Gloves & Madmen, Clutter & Vine untrod ground. In Mauve Gloves, Wolfe wrote about subjects that had been widely covered before and sought to bring his unique insight to old stories, rather
Violet (color) called mauveine, or abbreviated simply to mauve (the dye being named after the lighter color of the mallow [mauve] flower). Used to dye clothes, it became
1890s industrial workforce. From 1926 the period was sometimes referred to as the "Mauve Decade", because William Henry Perkin's aniline dye (discovered in London
Maxine Feibelman these mauve tights, I bet you wouldn't wear them onstage.'" John later explained that Feibelman gave him a "Fillmore West T-shirt, which was mauve, purple