— The Colorway Edit · Accent
The Blush Edit
Blush is a dusty, sun-faded rose rather than a sweet pink — muted enough that it reads as a neutral with color in it, not a color statement. Where a brighter pink would read as a deliberate style choice, Blush is restrained to the point that it functions inside the same warm-neutral system as Stone or Clay, just with a rose cast instead of a brown one.
The undertone is warm, which is what keeps it unisex in practice rather than in theory — it sits closer to faded terracotta-pink than to anything gendered, the kind of pink you'd find on a sun-bleached awning rather than a greeting card. That restraint is deliberate: the whole Horizon system avoids any colorway that reads as a costume rather than a wardrobe piece, and Blush is the test case for how far "pink" can go before it breaks that rule.
Wear it as the single soft note in an outfit built from Stone or Ink — never as the whole look. Warm-metal accessories, worn tonally, keep it grounded; cooler accents fight the undertone. Best worn in transitional light — golden hour, early autumn — when its faded quality reads intentional rather than washed out.
— Available in Blush · 13
— 3 Ways to Wear Blush
Quiet Romance
- Blush Tee
- Stone Wide pants
- Tan leather belt
Stone is muted enough that Blush reads as the outfit's only color, exactly as intended.
Balanced Accent
- Blush Hoodie
- Ink Joggers
- Ink Gloves
Ink is the only tone dark enough to let Blush read as deliberate rather than accidental.
Soft Layer
- Blush Long-sleeve
- Ecru Shorts
- Ecru Cap
Two soft tones together keep the outfit gentle from top to bottom — no hard contrast needed.
— FAQ
Is blush a unisex color?
Yes — the Horizon blush is dusty and muted rather than sweet or bright, which is why it reads as a neutral pink rather than a gendered one. It sits closer to faded rose than a bright pink.
What shoes and accessories go with blush clothing?
Keep the rest of the outfit in warm neutrals — stone, ecru, or ink — and let blush do the only "color" work in the look. Warm-metal accessories keep it grounded; cooler accents fight the undertone.
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