A variant of Scarlet, from the English word for the rich red color and historically a luxury cloth term.
Skarlet is a striking orthographic variant of Scarlett, a surname-turned-given-name with roots in the Old French escarlate and Persian saqerlāt — both referring to a vivid red cloth of exceptional quality. In medieval Europe, scarlet cloth was expensive and prestigious, associated with wealth, ecclesiastical power, and nobility. The color itself carries ancient associations: red has signified passion, danger, courage, and vitality across virtually every human culture, making Scarlett a name saturated with chromatic symbolism from its very etymology.
Scarlett's rise as a given name is inseparable from one of American literature's most iconic characters: Scarlett O'Hara in Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind (1936), a heroine of fierce will, moral complexity, and survival instinct who became one of fiction's most debated protagonists. The name subsequently received a second wave of cultural energy through actress Scarlett Johansson, who brought it into the contemporary mainstream. By the 2010s, Scarlett had become a top-ten name in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia simultaneously.
Skarlet — swapping the 'c' for a 'k' — is part of a long tradition of personalizing popular names through spelling modification, a practice that intensified significantly in American naming culture after the 1980s. The 'k' gives the name a sharper, more angular visual presence, suggesting edge and individuality. It is the orthographic equivalent of turning up the volume: the same vivid color, the same historical resonance, but with a visual flourish that declares this particular Skarlet will be nobody's carbon copy.