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PANTONE 2037

PANTONE 2037

Parameters:
HEX Triplet:
#E09BBE
RGB:
224, 155, 190
CMYK:
2, 51, 0, 0
HSL:
330°, 31%, 88%
Closest colors:
in PANTONE:
PANTONE 223
in RAL Classic:
RAL 3015
in RAL Design:
RAL 340 70 30
in RAL Effect:
RAL 520-3
What color is PANTONE 2037? The Accidental Birth of PANTONE 2037
2024-09-03 Snargl 02:10

What color is PANTONE 2037?

Pink office with a view of the city outside the window and a pink desk and chair in the foreground. Color RGB 224,155,190.
Painting of a woman with purple hair and a purple shirt and tie and a purple background
PANTONE 2037 is a light shade of magenta-pink that belongs to the PANTONE MATCHING SYSTEM™ (PMS).

It has a hexadecimal color code of #E09BBE, which means it is composed of 87.84% red, 60.78% green and 74.51% blue in the RGB color model.

This colour has a hue of 330°, a saturation of 31% and a lightness of 88% in the HSL color space.

It is a vibrant and feminine color that can be used for various purposes, such as fashion, cosmetics, packaging, and graphic design.

PANTONE 2037 is available in different Pantone products, such as guides, chips, and books.

Example of the palette with the PANTONE 2037 color

Picture with primary colors of Teal blue, Byzantium, Moonstone blue, Rose gold and Dark jungle green
Top 5 color shades of the illustration. Arranged in descending order of frequency of occurrence (first - more often, last - more rare).
See these colors in NCS, PANTONE, RAL palettes...
Author:
Funny stories about the 'PANTONE 2037'

The Accidental Birth of PANTONE 2037

Far-far away, in the bustling city of Chromopolis, where colors ruled supreme and fashion was a high-stakes game, there lived a man named Zahir Moon. Zahir was an entrepreneur with a flair for the eccentric, known for his outlandish ideas and his deep obsession with creating something no one had ever seen before. He believed the future of fashion was hidden in a color yet to be discovered - a color that would revolutionize the industry.

But Zahir was no scientist. His ideas needed the grounding of a disciplined mind. That’s where Professor Hubert Gonzalez came in. Professor Gonzalez was a man of few words and many equations, with a reputation for solving problems others wouldn’t dare touch. He had a particular talent for color theory, which made him the perfect partner for Zahir’s latest venture: the creation of the world’s first "impossible" color.
#E09BBE color example: Woman in a pink hoodie is standing in the street with a city in the background and a star - studded necklace

Zahir burst into Professor Gonzalez’s lab one morning, his eyes alight with the spark of inspiration - or perhaps madness. "Professor, I’ve got it!" he declared, nearly tripping over a stack of color wheels. "We need to create a color that doesn’t exist on the spectrum. A color so unique it will define the next generation of fashion!"

Professor Gonzalez adjusted his thick glasses, peering at Zahir as if trying to decide whether this was another one of his wild goose chases. "A color that doesn’t exist? Zahir, do you realize what you’re asking for? Colors are based on wavelengths of light. You can’t just invent a new wavelength."

But Zahir was undeterred. "That’s where you come in! If anyone can bend the rules of light, it’s you. We’ll call it PANTONE 2037, after the year we’ll make fashion history!"

The Professor sighed deeply but couldn’t resist the challenge. After all, he had spent his life surrounded by the mundane predictability of primary colors, tertiary colors, and everything in between. The idea of creating a color that defied all known principles intrigued him. "Alright, Zahir, I’ll help you. But you must understand, this might not be possible."

Weeks turned into months as they worked in secret, mixing chemicals, bending light, and even dabbling in quantum physics to break the barriers of known colors. Zahir would often burst into the lab with ideas that bordered on the absurd - like painting with moonbeams or using liquid dreams as a base for the pigment. Professor Gonzalez would patiently explain why those ideas were impractical, but somehow, the chaos always led to an unexpected breakthrough.
Woman with pink hair and a pink sweater smiling at the camera with a pink bow in her hair. Color PANTONE 2037.

One fateful evening, as they were about to call it a day, something peculiar happened. Zahir, in his usual haphazard manner, spilled an experimental compound onto a sample of ultra-black pigment. To their astonishment, the spill created a vibrant, shimmering color that neither of them had ever seen before. It was a shade that seemed to shift and change, evoking a sense of nostalgia and futurism all at once.

Zahir’s eyes widened. "Professor, what is this?"

Professor Gonzalez was speechless. The color didn’t fit into any known category. It wasn’t quite blue, not exactly purple, and had hints of metallic sheen without being metallic. After running a battery of tests, they confirmed that the color didn’t reflect any single wavelength of light but rather a spectrum that the human eye interpreted as something entirely new.

Zahir jumped up, almost knocking over a beaker. "This is it! PANTONE 2037! We’ve done it!"

The Professor, still in shock, nodded slowly. "It appears we have."

News of their discovery spread like wildfire through the fashion world. Designers clamored for the rights to use PANTONE 2037, claiming it brought a fresh, almost magical quality to their work. The color became a sensation, appearing in everything from high fashion gowns to avant-garde art installations.

In the end, Zahir Moon became a legend in the fashion industry, known as the man who dared to dream of the impossible. And Professor Hubert Gonzalez, though he never fully understood how they had managed to create a color that defied all known science, was satisfied with the knowledge that he had contributed to something truly groundbreaking.

As for PANTONE 2037, it became more than just a color; it became a symbol of creativity, innovation, and the power of thinking beyond the conventional spectrum. And to this day, no one quite knows how it came to be - some say it was a stroke of genius, others believe it was pure luck, but most agree it was the perfect combination of both.
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