Electric Violet
HEX: #8F00FF | Modern Palette
Color Specifications
#8F00FF
143, 0, 255
273°, 100% ,100%
43.92, 100, 0, 0
About Electric Violet
Electric Violet (#8F00FF) is a color with RGB(143, 0, 255) and HSL(273.65°, 100%, 100%). It is commonly associated with Playful moods. In design, it fits Neon styles and is suitable for Text, Button, Background. Its complementary color is #70FF00, which creates strong contrast. Its triadic palette includes Princeton Orange (#FF8F00) and #00FF8F. The name comes from Electric Violet (English).
- HEX: #8F00FF
- RGB: 143, 0, 255
- HSL: 273.65°, 100%, 100%
- Mood: Playful
- Style: Neon
- Use case: Text, Button, Background
- Complementary color: #70FF00
- Triadic colors: Princeton Orange (#FF8F00), #00FF8F
- The name comes from Electric Violet (English).
Live Components
Color Palettes
Color Harmonies
Complementary
The color directly opposite on the color wheel — creates maximum contrast and vibrance.
Analogous
Colors adjacent on the wheel — naturally harmonious and pleasing to the eye.
Triadic
Three colors equally spaced 120° apart — bold, balanced, and visually rich.
Split-Complementary
Two colors flanking the complement — high contrast with less tension than full complementary.
Tetradic (Square)
Four colors at 90° intervals — rich variety, best when one color dominates.
Monochromatic
Shades and tints of the same hue — cohesive, elegant, and easy to work with.
Shades & Tints
A seamless scale of #8F00FF from deepest shade to lightest tint.
Color Characteristics
Accessibility Simulation
#5050FE
#3030FF
#696464
#656565
Frequently Asked Questions
Name, History & Etymology
History
The naming convention of 'electric' colors emerged to describe hues that were exceptionally bright, almost glowing, often achieved with modern synthetic pigments. Violet, being a color associated with royalty, mystery, and creativity, when combined with 'electric,' suggests a modern, energetic, and striking interpretation of the shade. It became particularly popular in fashion, graphic design, and digital media where vibrant, eye-catching colors were desired.
First Recorded Use
While specific 'first use' as a named color is hard to pinpoint exactly, the concept of 'electric' colors gained popularity in the 1980s with the rise of neon and vibrant synthetic dyes. The term 'electric violet' likely solidified in common usage during this period or slightly after.
Cultural Associations
Electric Violet is often associated with futurism, technology, and the digital age due to its 'electric' descriptor. It can evoke feelings of excitement, creativity, and individuality. In fashion, it's used to make bold statements. In digital art and UI design, it can signify energy or highlight interactive elements. It also has connections to cyberpunk aesthetics and synthwave culture.
Code Snippets
/* Background */
.element {
background-color: #8F00FF;
}
/* Text */
.element {
color: #8F00FF;
}
/* Border */
.element {
border: 1px solid #8F00FF;
}
/* Linear gradient to complementary */
.element {
background: linear-gradient(
to right,
#8F00FF,
#FFFFFF
);
}
/* Radial gradient */
.element {
background: radial-gradient(
circle,
#8F00FF,
#FFFFFF
);
}
// SCSS variable
$electric-violet: #8F00FF;
// With RGB channels (useful for rgba() usage)
$electric-violet-r: 143;
$electric-violet-g: 0;
$electric-violet-b: 255;
// Usage
.element {
background-color: $electric-violet;
color: rgba($electric-violet-r, $electric-violet-g, $electric-violet-b, 0.8);
}