Color one

Desert sand

#EDC9AF

Color two

Tuscany

#C09999

Desert sand (#EDC9AF) and Tuscany (#C09999) appear together across 6 master palettes in our corpus, most prominently in the work of Georges Lacombe, John Lewis Krimmel, and Kimon Loghi and the Symbolism tradition. Painters typically deployed desert sand at an average of 21% of the canvas, with tuscany at 11%. Third colors most often completing the combination include Beaver (#9F8170), Khaki (#C3B091), and Raisin black (#242124).

Artworks Featuring Desert sand & Tuscany

Gompa palette card
Gompa
Nicholas Roerich · 1932
Mountain Fire palette card
Mountain Fire
John Singer Sargent · 1903
Himalayas palette card
Himalayas
Nicholas Roerich · 1937
Elbrus, Caucasus. palette card
Elbrus, Caucasus.
Nicholas Roerich · 1933
Tibet. At Brahmaputra. palette card
Tibet. At Brahmaputra.
Nicholas Roerich · 1936
Pater-devil palette card
Pater-devil
Nicholas Roerich · 1912

Master palettes

Palettes Featuring Desert sand & Tuscany

6 master palettes where Desert sand and Tuscany appear together most prominently.

Georges Lacombe Palette 1 - Pale Apricot

Georges Lacombe

24.0% Desert sand · 15.1% Tuscany

John Lewis Krimmel Palette 6 - Muted Tawny

John Lewis Krimmel

25.2% Desert sand · 13.8% Tuscany

Kimon Loghi Palette 1 - Luminous Flaxen

Kimon Loghi

34.2% Desert sand · 9.7% Tuscany

Nikolaus Knüpfer Palette 2 - Shadowed Gamboge

Nikolaus Knüpfer

14.9% Desert sand · 11.0% Tuscany

Ivan Aivazovsky Palette 6 - Gleaming Ivory

Ivan Aivazovsky

13.7% Desert sand · 7.9% Tuscany

yakusha-e Palette 2 - Soft Ecru

yakusha-e

13.3% Desert sand · 7.5% Tuscany

Choose another color