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  2. 10 Fall Decorating Trends You're About to See Everywhere ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/10-fall-decorating-trends...

    This particular arrangement features black dahlias, purple hazel leaves, blood-red ornamental grass, and purple-hued artichokes; also consider red or black roses, cobra lilies, black calla lilies ...

  3. See Inside the Space Ina Garten Calls the "Coziest Room in ...

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    “When I'm picking a color, it's like a thousand paint samples,” Garten says. (She clarifies that she actually went through 100 to 200 purple paints to find the right shade.

  4. Starbucks' Just Dropped Their 2024 Halloween Line, Including ...

    www.aol.com/starbucks-just-dropped-2024...

    The Purple Potion Glow-in-the-Dark Cold Cup (16 oz, $14.95 and 24 oz, $29.95) features a somewhat shiny bright purple color that has flecks of green paint splatter. The smaller size comes with a ...

  5. List of South Park characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_South_Park_characters

    Stan has black hair, light skin, blue eyes (though color not visible due to how the series is animated), and is of average nine-year-old height. He usually wears a navy-blue beanie cap with a red trimming and a red pom-pom ball on the top of it, matching red gloves, a light-brown jacket with a matching red collar, blue jeans, and black shoes.

  6. San Diego State University - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Diego_State_University

    The initial colors of the school were white and gold. When the junior college was added to the campus in 1921, its colors of blue and gold were merged, resulting in a blue, gold, and white color scheme. New colors were later chosen as gold and purple, until being replaced by scarlet and black on January 28, 1928. [129]

  7. Saffron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saffron

    A degree of uncertainty surrounds the origin of the English word "saffron". It might stem from the 12th-century Old French term safran, which comes from the Latin word safranum, from the Persian (زعفران, za'farān), [10] from the Persian word zarparān (زرپران) meaning "gold strung" (implying either the golden stamens of the flower or the golden colour it creates when used as flavour).

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