Blue: The Ocean of Peace

My dear friends, imagine a boundless ocean, where waves caress the shore like whispers of stars in the midnight hush, and the horizon melts into a sapphire haze.

COLORS

Victoria Von

6/10/20252 min read

a close up view of a blue liquid
a close up view of a blue liquid

For me, an artist, blue is the breath of the sky, the soft glow of moonlight spilling over a sleeping earth. My blue paintings are not the chill of depths but a tender embrace of waters, cradling you like a lullaby, calling to peace like a breeze humming an ancient song. Today, I’ll share the story of blue: its vibrations, the energy center it awakens, and how it can be your beacon to clarity or, in excess, lead you into shadow.

Blue is a wave of the spectrum from 450 to 495 nanometers, where light hums with high frequency but gentle strength, like the murmur of sea foam. It touches the fifth energy center, located at the throat, at the base of the neck. This center is our voice, a bridge between heart and mind, like a river carrying truth to the sea. When balanced, the fifth energy center gifts clarity of expression, confidence in words, and inspiration to share thoughts, as if you’re singing your soul’s melody. It urges creativity, honest conversations, and creation, like clouds weaving poetry across a sunset sky. My clients share how a blue painting in their bedroom or workspace helps them find words, create, and feel heard, as if the stars nod: “You are free.” In imbalance, this center breeds silence, fear of speaking, or harshness, like a storm drowning out your voice.

When blue is in harmony, it’s a cool light, offering peace and inspiration. It calls you to dream, write, listen to yourself, like a wave always returning to the shore. But too much blue can chill the soul. An excess of this color in an interior, especially cold shades, may lead to melancholy or detachment, as if you’re lost in an icy cave where warmth fades. I’ve seen rooms drowned in blue make people feel lonely, as if thoughts sink into silence. So, I suggest balancing blue with warm accents—creamy, golden, beige—and using it as an oasis: a painting, curtains, a cushion, so it whispers rather than engulfs.

Blue is multifaceted, like the sky at different hours. Its shades range from deep indigo, evoking velvet night, to vibrant azure, like the sea under a noon sun. There are soft tones of turquoise, whispering of lagoons, and cool sapphire ones, like stars frozen in ice. Indigo calms, azure inspires, turquoise heals, and cobalt adds depth. In my paintings, I weave blue’s gradients to make them breathe, like waves swaying under the wind, offering peace and motion.

Who do I recommend blue for? Those seeking clarity, longing to express themselves, or feeling chaos in their thoughts. It’s perfect for creative souls—writers, speakers, artists whose words and ideas crave freedom. A blue painting in an interior will enliven a bedroom, gifting restful sleep, or a workspace, where ideas are born. But if you’re prone to sadness or withdrawal, choose warm shades—turquoise, aquamarine—to let the color embrace rather than pull you into shadow.

My blue canvases are the breath of the sea at dawn, each stroke carrying an intention: to gift you peace, to cleanse your aura. They harmonize the fifth energy center, letting words flow like a river to the ocean. In an interior, they shine as stars, glowing when balanced with warm tones. I create them so you feel free, inspired, ready to sing your song. Close your eyes, imagine a wave kissing the shore under a starry sky—this is the blue I weave into your home. Let it guide you to clarity, gently and tenderly.

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