An arch of cherry blossom closes over a canal until the whole street is one pale tunnel of pink. Sakura season is the palest of palettes — a colour so soft it is almost a memory of pink, named and graded by a tradition that watched the season closely.
SAKURA-IRO IS A PINK SO PALE IT IS ALMOST A MEMORY OF PINK.
Walked beneath, the canopy is a wash of named pinks: sakura-iro, the cherry-blossom pale; usubeni, the faint crimson; nadeshiko-iro, the dianthus pink against shironeri white. The Japanese Color Atlas catalogues them as a family — each a named approximation, each honest about its uncertainty.
A SEASON YOU WALK THROUGH, NOT A SWATCH YOU HOLD.
Under the arch, a kimono reads as one more tone in the palette — pale lavender and washed pink against the petals. A palette is a relationship in time: the atlas keeps the names so a fortnight of blossom can be cited, not just remembered.