A Crayola Collection of Colour Names!

From bright blues to somber greys these baby names would look as at home on a paint chart as on your sprogs birth certificate.
  1. Ash
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Asher, English
    • Meaning:

      "ash tree"
    • Description:

      Ash has Southern charm plus the arboreal-nature appeal. Plus your little boy will prize Ash as the name of the hero of the Pokemon cartoons. Ash can also be a dashing short form of Asher, Ashton, or any other "Ash" name.
  2. Blue
    • Origin:

      Color name
    • Description:

      Among the coolest of the cool color names, particularly popular with celebs as a unisex middle name.
  3. Carmine
    • Cerise
      • Origin:

        French
      • Meaning:

        "cherry"
      • Description:

        Infinitely preferable to the tease-inspiring English version of the word.
    • Clover
      • Origin:

        Flower name, from Old English
      • Meaning:

        "key"
      • Description:

        Clover is a charming, perky choice if you want to move beyond hothouse blooms like Rose and Lily, and it's recently become a new celeb favorite, chosen by both Neal McDonough and Natasha Gregson Wagner, who used it to honor her mother, Natalie Wood, one of whose most iconic films was Inside Daisy Clover.
    • Cobalt
      • Origin:

        Color and nature name
      • Description:

        Even among the range of blue names on the current baby naming palette -- Blue itself, Azure, Cerulean, Teal, Aqua, Cyan, Indigo -- Cobalt remains the most unusual, not to mention the most masculine.
    • Cole
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "swarthy, coal black"
      • Description:

        Cole -- a short name that embodies a lot of richness and depth -- has long been associated with the great songwriter Cole Porter. It's quite popular in Scotland.
    • Coral
      • Origin:

        Nature name
      • Description:

        First used during the Victorian craze for jewel names; it could rise again, along with Ruby and Pearl, though it doesn't have as much luster.
    • Chartreuse
      • Copper
        • Ebony
          • Origin:

            English
          • Description:

            An attractive and now underused nature name belonging to a tree whose wood is prized for its dark color and dense texture, which shines when polished. Ebony joined the most popular girl names list in the US in the early 1970s, peaked in 1982 at #132, and dropped back below the Top 1000 in 2006.
        • Emerald
          • Origin:

            Gem name; Persian
          • Meaning:

            "green"
          • Description:

            Emerald is the intriguing color and jewel name of the deep green stone treasured as far back as ancient Egypt — it's supposed to open one's heart to wisdom and to love and be good for strengthening relationships — which could make for an interesting, unusual name, particularly with the popularity of so many Em-starting names.
        • Fuschia
          • Garnet
            • Origin:

              Jewel name, from the French
            • Meaning:

              "pomegranate"
            • Description:

              One of the jewel names in use a hundred years ago, due for revival along with sisters Ruby and Pearl.
          • Ginger
            • Origin:

              English diminutive
            • Description:

              Originally a unisex nickname for a redhead -- red hair is called "ginger" in Britain -- or for the name Virginia, Ginger perennially wears pink gingham and spike heels.
          • Glade
            • Origin:

              Nature name
            • Meaning:

              "clearing in a forest"
            • Description:

              Shady, leafy nature-boy name.
          • Goldie
            • Origin:

              Anglicized form of Yiddish Golde or Golda
            • Meaning:

              "gold"
            • Description:

              Goldie is a shimmering new addition to the nickname name lineup, and became one of the fastest rising girl names in 2023. After peaking at Number 114 in 1904-1905, Goldie slid off the list completely in 1958. She re-entered the US Top 1000 again in 2021.
          • Hunter
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "one who hunts"
            • Description:

              Hunter has been dropping a bit for the past few years but is still one of the leaders of a distinctive band of boys' names that combines macho imagery (Hunter, Austin, Harley) with a softened masculinity. Hunter was for years attached to gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson; Josh Holloway used it for his son.
          • Ivory
            • Origin:

              Word name
            • Meaning:

              "hard, white material from the tusks and teeth of animals; pale, white"
            • Description:

              Ivory was last popular a hundred years ago. In 2013, it finally began to regain some momentum in the female rankings, reentering the Top 1000.
          • Ivy
            • Origin:

              Botanical name
            • Description:

              The quirky, offbeat and energetic botanical name Ivy is enjoying a deserved revival, propelled even higher by its choice by high-profile parents Beyonce and Jay-Z for daughter Blue Ivy. Ivy is also traditionally used at Christmas, make this one of the perfect names for December babies.