Magenta madness
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Barbie pink
Who does not associate pink with one of the most popular toys of all time? Pink has been the colour of femininity for many years. It usually appears on women's products, women's clothes, and symbolizes a girl when announcing the gender of an unborn child. Pink is a colour derived from red, therefore, similarly to shades of red, it is associated with love. Pink is a cheerful and cheerful colour, but due to its connections with the plastic queen of fashion and beauty, it is associated with a bit infantile, especially in a bright, saturated version. Pink is still the favourite of little girls, but it is also more and more often creeping into women's fashion and can be easily woven into more elegant stylizations.

The Color That Calms
In the 1970s, the director of the American Institute of Biosocial Research in Tacoma, Alexander Schauss, conducted research on colours and their influence on the human mental state. Schauss conducted a series of experiments on a group of over 150 men showing them cardboard boxes in various colours. In his research, he found that men who looked at cardboard in a peculiar shade of pink experienced a marked reduction in heart rate, pulse and breathing compared to other colours. With the results of his research, in 1979, Schauss approached the directors of the Institute of Prisons in Seatlle, Gene Baker and Ron Miller, and persuaded them to paint two prison cells for this shade of pink, which quickly became known as Baker-Miller Pink. The color was obtained by mixing a gallon of white paint with a mug of red paint and is very similar to the popular American remedy for stomach problems - Pepto-Bismol.
Pink in the interior

Many people say that the roses in the interior are reserved for the children's room. But does pink only suit a girl's room? Arrangements with pink colour do not have to look kitschy or infantile. The skilfully used pink colour can give an interior elegance and unusual style. Saturated roses are perfect for maximalist interiors. Intensive pink will also be a great contrasting accent in raw, industrial spaces. If you want to achieve the effect of subtlety with pink in the interior, combine it with white, grey or wood in warm shades. In crazier, pop-art interiors, strong pink will play in the company of blue, yellow, green or red..
