Tiffany, Zara and Lola for triplet girls. Thoughts?
Opinions?
Do they work or clash too much?
Do they work or clash too much?
Replies
Yeah they don’t work imo. Zara and Lola could work together, but Tiffany sticks out and is a dated 80’s name. Zara, Lola and Asha would work, or Zara, Lola and Maya.
It's okay. I can see Tiffany and Zara together, and I can see Lola and Zara together, but not Tiffany and Lola, if I'm going to be nitpicky. Tiffany seems much more mature than Lola, which strikes me as a youthful nickname. Both names seem more mature than Lola, but it can see it better with Zara because they both have 4 letters, 2 syllables and end in A. Maybe Tiffany, Zara and Dolores?
This message was edited 4/4/2024, 3:19 PM
In a weird way, they work together for me. They all strike me as coquettish names. Maybe Zara slightly less, but still. All 3 names are flirty and fun in their own way. They feel a bit anachronistic - Tiffany is very 80s, Lola is from the 50s, and Zara is the modern one. I think that's the element that makes them feel strange together. The names all have the same spirit, but everyone feels like a time traveller.
Tiffany is the odd name out. And not just because it's dated. Two two-syllable names and then Tiffany - why? Zara, Dolores and maybe a single-syllable name like Brynn, Dale, Eve, Fern, Gail, Jade or Jane, Merle, Ruth, Star?
I don't think they clash but I do like Zara and Lola a lot more than I like Tiffany. Zara/Lola feel fun and fresh and Tiffany feels dated.
Since Tiffany and Zara are both major brand names, I would expect Lola to be one, too, but it's not, which makes the set confusing. All three names are rendered down market by virtue of existing alongside one another.
Unpopular opinion but I think Lola is the odd one out. The other names have more sass to them.
Tiffany doesn't fit ...
Zara and Lola are quite trendy now, but Tiffany sounds like their mother rather than their sister.
Talia or Mila or kaya would fit better.
Zara and Lola are quite trendy now, but Tiffany sounds like their mother rather than their sister.
Talia or Mila or kaya would fit better.