| Platform | Implementation | |----------|----------------| | | color: #7F3E98; background-color: #7F3E98; | | Sass/LESS | $aviana-violet: #7F3E98; .btn-primary background: $aviana-violet; | | Design Systems | Add a token: --color-aviana-violet: #7F3E98; | | Accessibility | Ensure a contrast ratio of at least 4.5:1 against adjacent text/background (WCAG AA). Use tools like the WebAIM Contrast Checker. |
| Jurisdiction | Trademark? | Copyright? | Trade Dress? | Practical Takeaway | |--------------|------------|------------|--------------|--------------------| | United States | No (no registration) | No (color alone) | Possible, but unlikely | Free to use, but avoid copying entire designs that are known to be associated with a brand. | | European Union | No | No | Same as US | Same recommendation. | | United Kingdom | No | No | Same as US | Same recommendation. | | Canada | No | No | Same as US | Same recommendation. | aviana violet freeuse
| Question | Answer | |----------|--------| | | Yes, provided you keep the CC‑BY‑SA attribution and any derivative works you publish are also under CC‑BY‑SA (or a compatible license). | | What if I want to use a non‑CC‑BY‑SA license for my own assets? | You can license your own additions (e.g., level design, original music) however you like, but Aviana’s portion must remain CC‑BY‑SA. | | Do I need to credit the remixers if I use their modifications? | Absolutely. Each derivative carries its own attribution chain. List the original creator and the remix contributor. | | Can I trademark “Aviana Violet”? | No. The name is part of the CC‑BY‑SA work and thus cannot be exclusively claimed. | | Copyright
Aviana Violet Freeuse can be used in a variety of ways, depending on your specific needs and preferences. Here are some of the most common uses of this incredible plant: | | European Union | No | No
All these assets are hosted on and GitHub , where contributors can submit pull requests, report bugs, and vote on new features.
Aviana shows that visual assets can be as collaborative as software libraries. The same pull‑request workflow that powers Linux can power art pipelines.