Pantone Color of the Year 2024
Peach Fuzz and jewelry: on-trend Combinations
🍑 Pantone color trend of the year
Pantone Color 2024: Peach Fuzz
For Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute, Peach Fuzz is an appropriate color for the moment we live in, a reflection of the basic human needs and desires that many feel in the midst of difficult times.
Peach tones were a staple of the spring-summer 2024 catwalks, especially in Milan, where Italian houses such as Gucci, Jil Sander and Sportmax set the tone.
Peach Fuzz as a Trend Color
The Pantone shade of the year 2024 is incredibly flattering and can be perfectly combined with all pieces of jewelry from the blue escape!
Creating a fresh and modern look with this color?
Peach impresses with its freshness and lightness and is reminiscent of summer and warm days.
The classic way to combine peach is with other soft colors. Please don't go too colorful, instead opt for pastel colors such as sky blue, mint, lilac or cream.
However, contrasts are the cooler option. A dark and dominant color creates an exciting contrast to the peach. Black or dark blue are perfect for this. This makes the new outfit particularly elegant and sophisticated and highlights our trend confidence.
Some Insider Tips
We go for silver jewelry with this trend. The peach tone can quickly look unfashionable with gold. Silver is the more elegant choice. Best worn with gemstones in light blue such as blue topaz or aquamarine. We can also create exciting contrasts with dark stones such as lapis lazuli or an onyx in black.
➡️ Discover the Collection!
We are keeping the make-up just as subtle and opting for lips and blush in apricot. What's particularly sophisticated: the same shade as eye shadow! Making our look extra fresh and young.
Delicate, warm and elegant. For a loving 2024 in style!
By the way: the first color of the year was sky blue in 1999. "It was wonderful, hopeful, all those wonderful feelings you have when you think about the future. But there was also the fear that all the clocks would stop," says Eismann. "That was a challenge. But for us it was simple: the color of the sky, the color of the universe, what lies ahead."