Shikiro

Terracotta

The word terracotta means baked earth in Italian. For over 10,000 years, humans have shaped this color into shelter, vessels, and art. It is the oldest orange there is — not chosen, but made by fire and time.

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Burnt Orange

Burnt Orange is what remains after the peak has passed. Not the flame, but what the flame left behind. In the American South, it became a cultural identity — worn not as fashion, but as belonging.

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Pure Orange

Pure Orange holds nothing back. In the Netherlands, it became the color of a nation — worn on King's Day by an entire country as a single, joyful declaration. This is orange without apology.

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Coral Orange

Coral Orange lives at the edge of warmth — where sunset meets water. Named after coral reefs, it carries the color of healthy life just beneath the surface. Soft, but present.

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Apricot

Apricot is orange at its most restrained. The shade originated in China over 4,000 years ago — and it was the color, not the fruit, that traveled furthest. Warm without heat. Golden without glare.

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Rust Orange

Rust Orange is time made visible. In Japanese lacquerware, this depth of tone signals deliberate aging — beauty that arrives slowly, not all at once. It is the color of things that got better by waiting.

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