No.
Your luck doesn't depend on colors.
Another thought
The colour green has been for generations a very bad luck colour for a bride or member of a wedding party.
It's not, I'm Irish, and I've never heard of it being unlucky. I wear green all the time. I have never been taught it is unlucky. So green is not seen as unlucky in Ireland.
it's the color of a clover
Yes! I am sooooooOOOOOOOOoooooo wearing green!
This is just another Americanized myth. Green is worn on St. Patrick's day and it is a national colour, but there are no links between wearing it and being luckier. Indeed, there are also no links between wearing it and being lucky, either. I suppose it depends on what you believe. However, if you don't wear green on St. Paddy's day, everyone around you is allowed to pinch/punch/kick/bite/cause physical harm to/shove you.
The little girl wearing a green wig
Wearing green,getting pinched for not wearing green, & shamrocks
he was an unlucky kid who had believed he and his family was cursed
blue
the Junior Canadian Team are wearing Green as a tribute ti Saskatchewan Fans.
Green machine?
not in the area in which i was reared - south east. i can't answer for everywhere else. No way! green is not a symbol of bad luck in Ireland.It shows of prosperous green lands. Im from the west coast. I have never heard of it being unlucky It did in years gone by. Green is the favourite colour of the Little People. If you wore too much of it, you could offend them and they would dry your cows, steal your children, ruin your crops etc. This belief only died out in the mid twentieth century. Certainly my Grandparents would not wear green, and very little green cloth was sold here until the 1950s. Answer I grew up in Dublin (born 1932) and nobody thought green unlucky; you saw it everywhere. Gates, railings, fences, letterboxes, telephone booths etc were always painted green. Since ancient time Ireland has been known as the Emerald Isle and the old Irish flag was green with a gold harp. Green was symbolic of Ireland and of Irish nationalism and perhaps some people may have avoided wearing it in case they might be suspected of being "rebels". (Cf. references to green in rebel songs: Wearing of the green - 1798; Boolavogue - 1898; Wrap the green flag round me - 1916). I never heard that green was unlucky until I started mixing with English people and assumed their belief was based on the association green/Irish and the fact that their Irish "subjects" had always given them trouble!
She was wearing a green bowling shirt and she was in the cafeteria.