Blue drifted into the world of given names like a sea-salt breeze, carrying the English color word that traces back through Old French bleu to the Latin caeruleus that once stroked Virgil’s verses. Pronounced simply “bloo,” it is a truly unisex choice, wrapping any child in an airy mantle of calm that recalls a Mediterranean cielo azul at dawn. In the United States its popularity has rolled in gentle waves—never common, yet steadily present, cresting at just over fifty newborns in 2024—proof that a modest splash can still leave a vivid impression. Parents are drawn to the name’s rich palette of associations: the loyalty of denim, the creative surprise that arrives “out of the blue,” and the boundless depth of ocean and sky. A wink of humor hides in plain sight, for a little Blue can hardly wake up on the wrong side of the color wheel. Minimalist on paper yet saturated with meaning, Blue offers a modern, timeless canvas on which any life story can be painted.
| Blue Ivy Carter - |