Scientifically speaking, spectral violet--the violet color wavelength you actually see in the rainbow--is actually one of the hardest colors to see because the rods and cones in your eyes don't respond strongly to the violet color wavelength. The "blue" and "red" receptors in your eyes both respond to spectral violet, and your brain interprets these signals to mean "violet", which is why you can fool your brain with a mixture of red and blue light into thinking it's seeing "violet."
In color terms, "violet" is more bluish, whereas "purple" leans toward red.
Culturally, violet is the color of magic. Purple is the color of royalty. These are traditional fantasy tropes. Famous violet & purple D&D monsters include the Purple Worm, the Violet Fungus, and the Shrieker.
Violet & purple are also my wife's favorite colors, so I asked her to pick out miniatures for this batch. She came up with a mixed bag from Bones 2.
I talked about how hard it is to see violet. Of course violet is a neighbor to the even harder (impossible?) to see ultraviolet (UV). I decided to play around with UV-sensitive fluorescent and glow-in-the-dark paints, but it was kind of a bust. Here you can see the same arrangement of miniatures, lit up with a UV LED bulb and a blue compact fluorescent bulb (which also radiates some UV).
Here is a giant wolf facing off against a pair of lions; from their violet and purple features we can deduce that they are infused with magic.
Here are some monsters, born into their violet and purple hues. The turtle warrior and vulture demon guard the periphery. In the rear is a dracolisk with its baby dragon. The baby dragon reminded me of "Growf" from "What's New with Phil and Dixie," so I tried to color him appropriately.
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