I’ve decided to take a really good look at the Contemporary Romance Colors that are most prevalent on covers this year and attempt to identify what is the CR-COTY, the Contemporary Romance Color of the Year.
Sidenote: did you know I’m not technically supposed to name things? I’m not good at it. If “CR-COTY” is making your eyelids twitch, I am also responsible for the name DABWAHA, the bracket tournament of romance we used to co-host. So yeah, naming is not my strong suit.
BUT I’m DOING IT ANYWAY. Con Rom COTY!
As I mentioned in the first post about my color obsession, there are color schemes that are so closely tied to one genre, like Suspense is Blue and Gold.
I came to find out on BluSky that Librarian Extraordinare Robin Bradford calls it ‘Murder Yellow.’
MURDER. YELLOW.
So yeah, as I mentioned, I’m not good at naming things but Robin sure is! Murder Yellow. I love it.
The first collection of covers for your voting consideration has arrived, and the folder is called:
Green, Y’all.
I’m going to share the covers color by color, and at the end we’ll vote on which one is THE color of the year.
Before I show off all my covers that I’ve downloaded over the past few months, I want to cause your blood pressure to go up a little: have you seen ISMY.blue?
It’s going to test your color perception by showing different colors, and you have to identify if it is blue, or green. This caused a lot of yelling on BluSky, btw. So brace yourself.
In the event you spot a cover and think, ‘No, wait, that’s blue,’ I hear you. I spent too much time looking at shades of blue/green/blueish green/greenish blue for the past 10 minutes and am no longer sure what colors even are anymore.
All of these covers are linked should you want to learn more – shop that green wave, y’all! NB: our buy links contain affiliate codes that send a portion of your purchase back to us at no cost to you.
Shall we get started?
So, there is some GREEN going on in Contemporary Romance, eh? I expected all the holiday and Christmas romances to have green backgrounds, but so many contemporaries have green, teal, light green, dark green, tennis or pickleball court green – it’s a whole thing.
Oh – and there are some historical illustrated covers that are green, too:
These covers are GREEN AF.
So why green? Aside from the obvious green & red Christmas holiday connection, green has a few meanings within color theory. It can represent nature, obvs, alongside related meanings like growth, beginnings, abundance, and possibility. A number of these covers are illustrations of people outside, so the references to nature make sense.
Cameron Chapman wrote an overview of color theory for designers at Smashing Magazine, and collected additional meanings for green in terms of design – and covers are marketing designed to be alluring to readers, so the meanings are important.
According to Chapman, green can also be a calming color, conveying balance or harmony, and, of course, money if you’re in the US. Our money is green (green is even a slang word for money) and that correlates to wealth. “Green” is also a shorthand for environmental awareness.
I know there is/was a very active dark green paint and wallpaper trend on Pinterest for bedrooms (I am looking for a color for my bedroom, which is how I noticed). It’s a popular color within the dark academia aesthetic, too: rich, soothing, invoking dark forests which can be peaceful or menacing or both. NB: I’m not as fluent in the meaning of the color green within the realm of art history, so if you have knowledge in that area, please share.
Ken Phillips at Hunter Lab notes that green is a sacred color within Islam as it was the prophet Mohammed’s favorite color – I didn’t know that! – and is connected to vitality and peace. Hailey Van Braam at ColorPsychology.org writes that green embodies “harmony, tranquility…stability and endurance,” all qualities that lend themselves well to a romance plotline: a reader expects the HEA will include some if not all of those components.
So in terms of contemporary romance, in addition to the Christmas holiday color scheme and the placement of the illustrated characters outdoors in green fields and yards, the use of green might evoke calm, balance and harmony, wealth, abundance, growth, and possibility. Makes sense!
I’ll have more colors for your perusal soon! Thanks for taking this trip through cover design and color theory with me. I’m having a really good time and I hope you’re enjoying this journey, too!
What do you think the color green conveys for Contemporary Romance? What other green covers have you spotted?