Orlando Sentinel

Confident Classic Blue is Pantone’s color of the year

- By Leanne Italie

In these uneasy times, as we move along to a new decade, the Pantone Color Institute has reached back in time to calming, confident Classic Blue as its color of the year for 2020.

The color is an anchor offering stability, constancy and connection, said Laurie Pressman, vice president of the global purveyors of color consulting, trendspott­ing and analysis.

“It’s a reassuring presence,” she said.

Akin to maritime blue — not indigo and brighter than navy — Classic Blue evokes a feeling of vast expanse, Pressman said of the shade also known as Pantone 19-4052.

Pressman and her team scoured the worlds of art, fashion and home decor — along with commercial, graphic and industrial design — to come up with the pick, as they have since Cerulean became the inaugural color of the year for the milestone 2000.

But Classic Blue isn’t just about nostalgia, she said. Creators around the globe are putting out modern takes for runways, mobile phones, kitchen appliances and the paint of pricey, forward-looking cars and motorcycle­s.

Pressman insisted the color was in no way a nod to the hue associated with the Democratic Party, though she knew the question would surface.

“This was not a political move for us. This is global. We do not look at color through a political lens. We look at our life through a colorful lens,” she told the AP.

Pantone chose Living Coral for 2019 and Ultra Violet the year before that.

Whether as throwback or harbinger of things to come, Classic Blue harks back to when things “seemed simpler, seemed more comfortabl­e, but at the same time not suggesting that it be done in a way that it was then,” Pressman said.

Cerulean, which heralded the new millennium, is the color of the daytime sky, while Classic Blue is the sky at dusk as the new decade commences.

“It has depth to it, but it’s a color of anticipati­on because we’re looking ahead,” Pressman said. “The day is over. We’re looking forward to the evening. What’s going to come?”

Classic Blue is a vibrant yet nonaggress­ive and easily relatable color, she said. It’s also among nature’s anthocyani­n pigments possessing antioxidan­t and other healthfost­ering benefits. Think blueberrie­s. “Many of us feel stressed, completely overloaded,” Pressman said. “We live these 24/7 lifestyles. We’re anxious. There’s so much uncertaint­y and unrest, no matter where you are. With that we’ve seen this whole increased focus on wellness and self-care.”

The timeless color is also gender neutral and seasonless, mixing well with other shades throughout the spectrum yet making a strong statement on its own. It also works well in a range of textures.

“It’s a color that can take on different appearance­s through different applicatio­ns, finishes and textures,” Pressman said, lending itself to everything from lustrous sheens to sparkly sequins.

The anointed blue also plays into the sustainabi­lity movement.

“We have all this focus on buy less, buy good, so people aren’t throwing things into a landfill,” Pressman said. “You read about buying things to last and this is a timeless blue shade. It’s always there and you’re comfortabl­e with it, like bluejeans.”

For offices, it offers an air of security, she said. For kitchens, it’s a top accent color in appliances and walls. Classic Blue is a mainstay color in stemware, dishes and other tabletop staples as a trusted expression of elegance, she said.

“Everybody’s comfortabl­e with blue,” Pressman said. “We know it. We like it.”

 ??  ?? A spring look in blue from GMBH.
A spring look in blue from GMBH.
 ?? GETTY PHOTOS ?? Ryan Roche’s blue sweater and skirt for spring 2020.
GETTY PHOTOS Ryan Roche’s blue sweater and skirt for spring 2020.

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