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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, December 7, 2008

Sunshine and cheer in the forecast

By Samantha Critchell
AP Fashion Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

The Spring 2009 collection from Michael Kors included what Pantone says will be the top shade of the new year: optimistic yellow.

Associated Press file photo

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Enough gloom and doom: There's a prediction from a leading color source that cheerful and sunny yellow will be the influential color of 2009.

Pantone, which provides color standards to design industries, specifically cites mimosa, a vibrant shade of yellow illustrated by the flowers of some mimosa trees as well as the brunch-favorite cocktail, as its top shade of the new year. In general, Pantone expects the public to embrace many tones of optimistic yellow.

"I think it's just the most wonderful symbolic color of the future," says Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute. "It's invariably connected to warmth, sunshine and cheer — all the good things we're in dire need of right now."

In the spring fashion collections previewed earlier in the fall for retailers and editors, pops of yellow brightened the runways of Carolina Herrera — who called her favorite shade marigold — Badgley Mischka, Zac Posen and Michael Kors, among others. Kors even included a retro yellow polka-dot bikini that clearly harkened back to a more upbeat time.

"People know yellow lightens up the atmosphere," Eiseman says.

It helps that it looks good in florals and complements current favorites, green and purple.

Flashes of yellow appear in kitchens, bathrooms and dining rooms, and it's moving into the living room. The color nicely straddles traditional — think of a Williamsburg-style formal dining room — and modern, such as a single statement wall in a cool downtown Manhattan loft.

This particular shade of mimosa should fare best in the kitchen, both in appliances and soft goods, but more mustardy colors will likely be more popular elsewhere in the house, says Tom Mirabile, vice president of global trends and design at Lifetime Brands.

"I'd say you should get used to seeing yellow in places you're not used to seeing it," Eiseman says.