Color one

Baby powder

#FEFEFA

Color two

Smoky black

#100C08

Baby powder (#FEFEFA) and Smoky black (#100C08) appear together across 6 master palettes in our corpus, most prominently in the work of Joseph DeCamp, J. C. Leyendecker, and Otto Gustav Carlsund and the Impressionism tradition. Painters typically deployed baby powder at an average of 34% of the canvas, with smoky black at 13%. Third colors most often completing the combination include Khaki (#C3B091), Bone (#E3DAC9), and Light French beige (#C8AD7F).

Artworks Featuring Baby powder & Smoky black

Evening Red palette card
Evening Red
Fanny Churberg
Merci II palette card
Merci II
Raphael Kirchner · 1916
Doge Francesco Dandolo and His Wife Presented to the Madonna palette card
Doge Francesco Dandolo and His Wife Presented to the Madonna
Paolo Veneziano · 1339
Sally palette card
Sally
Joseph DeCamp · 1907
Premier Disque palette card
Premier Disque
Robert Delaunay · 1913
Disks Bearing Spirals palette card
Disks Bearing Spirals
Marcel Duchamp · 1923

Master palettes

Palettes Featuring Baby powder & Smoky black

6 master palettes where Baby powder and Smoky black appear together most prominently.

Joseph DeCamp Palette 4 - Shadowed Parchment

Joseph DeCamp

33.9% Baby powder · 25.4% Smoky black

Op Art Palette 1 - Penumbral Parchment

Op Art

32.3% Baby powder · 13.4% Smoky black

J. C. Leyendecker Palette 2 - Soft Ecru

J. C. Leyendecker

38.0% Baby powder · 10.8% Smoky black

Otto Gustav Carlsund Palette 4 - Soft Ivory

Otto Gustav Carlsund

26.6% Baby powder · 12.2% Smoky black

Odoardo Borrani Palette 3 - Nocturnal Sienna

Odoardo Borrani

47.5% Baby powder · 6.0% Smoky black

Neoplasticism Palette 1 - Pale Alabaster

Neoplasticism

26.6% Baby powder · 10.6% Smoky black

Choose another color