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A Royal Hue: 'Living Coral' Crowned Color Of The Year For 2019

Living Coral is the Pantone Color Institute's color of the year for 2019. The vibrant hue represents "the fusion of modern life," the institute explains.
Courtesy of Pantone Color Institute
Living Coral is the Pantone Color Institute's color of the year for 2019. The vibrant hue represents "the fusion of modern life," the institute explains.

Updated at 5:56 a.m. ET

As December draws its darkest hours ever longer, inching moment by moment toward the shortest day of the year — in the northern hemisphere, at least — the Pantone Color Institute is striking a defiant tone. The global experts in hue have crowned "living coral" as their annual color of the year for 2019.

You can also call it by its official Pantone code, 16-1546 — though admittedly that doesn't have quite the same ring to it. It would also miss the point, in a way, since the institute selected the color for its "vibrant, yet mellow" life-affirming qualities — both our physical lives and those we lead online.

"Representing the fusion of modern life, PANTONE Living Coral is a nurturing color that appears in our natural surroundings and at the same time, displays a lively presence within social media," the institute explained in a release Wednesday.

Since naming cerulean blue the color of 2000, the Pantone Color Institute has been passing the crown to a new shade each year, basing its choice on trends observed in a wide variety of areas — including "entertainment industry and films in production, traveling art collections and new artists, fashion, all areas of design, popular travel destinations ..."

The list goes on.

Here's how the shade looks on a swatch released by the Pantone Color Institute, which describes living coral as "vibrant, yet mellow."
/ Pantone Color Institute via AP
/
Pantone Color Institute via AP
Here's how the shade looks on a swatch released by the Pantone Color Institute, which describes living coral as "vibrant, yet mellow."

Living coral is receiving the baton from a cousin on the color wheel, ultra violet — which, as NPR's Camila Domonoske pointed out last year, is not to be confused with invisible ultraviolet (note the lack of a space!) light. That deep purple earned the laurels for its "originality, ingenuity, and visionary thinking that points us towards the future."

As for living coral, the future may present a more complicated prospect.

When it comes to most headlines these days, the word "coral" doesn't often get the opportunity to be paired with "living." It's "dying" that gets that distinction more often than not, as reportafter reportafter reportafter report-- and so on — reveal the alarming extent to which human actions have played a role in bleaching and killing coral reefs around the world.

In this respect, a dark irony lurks in the fact that Pantone announced its honors for living coral on the same day climate scientists revealed that global carbon emissions are climbing, despite many countries' ambitious pledges to rein them in.

Pantone says it selected living coral partly as a way to remind people of "the desired, familiar, and energizing aspects of color found in nature."

"In its glorious, yet unfortunately more elusive, display beneath the sea, this vivifying and effervescent color mesmerizes the eye and mind," the institute says. "Lying at the center of our naturally vivid and chromatic ecosystem, PANTONE Living Coral is evocative of how coral reefs provide shelter to a diverse kaleidoscope of color."

And that kaleidoscope is to be found not just in the natural world but on our devices, making the color a perfect bridge for the modern world's complex dimensions, according to Pantone Executive Director Leatrice Eiseman.

"Color is an equalizing lens through which we experience our natural and digital realities, and this is particularly true for Living Coral," she said in a statement Wednesday. "With consumers craving human interaction and social connection, the humanizing and heartening qualities displayed by the convivial PANTONE Living Coral hit a responsive chord."

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Colin Dwyer covers breaking news for NPR. He reports on a wide array of subjects — from politics in Latin America and the Middle East, to the latest developments in sports and scientific research.
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