Gothic/Vampire/Dark Names

  1. Gray
    • Origin:

      Color name, also diminutive of Grayson
    • Description:

      The girls have Violet and Scarlet and Ruby and Rose, but for the boys there's a much more limited palette of color names. Gray (or Grey), is one exception, which could make for a soft and evocative--if slightly somber-- choice, especially in the middle. Kaitlin Olson and Rob McElhenney recently named their son Leo Grey.
  2. Hecate
    • Origin:

      Greek mythology name
    • Meaning:

      "willpower or far-reaching"
    • Description:

      In Greek mythology, Hecate is associated with witchcraft and magic. The name may mean "willpower" or "far-reaching".
  3. Helios
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "sun"
    • Description:

      The name of the young Greek sun god, brother to the moon goddess Selene, who rode across the sky each day in a chariot pulled by four horses.
  4. Hunter
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "one who hunts"
    • Description:

      Hunter has been dropping a bit for the past few years but is still one of the leaders of a distinctive band of boys' names that combines macho imagery (Hunter, Austin, Harley) with a softened masculinity. Hunter was for years attached to gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson; Josh Holloway used it for his son.
  5. Hades
    • Hemlock
      • Hex
        • Isobella
          • Izolabella
            • Jasper
              • Origin:

                Persian
              • Meaning:

                "bringer of treasure"
              • Description:

                Jasper originated as a variation of the Latin Gaspar, which ultimately derived from the Persian word ganzabara, meaning "bringer of treasure." As a given name, Jasper’s etymology is unrelated to that of the gemstone, which comes from a Semitic word meaning "speckled stone." Jasper is the usual English form for one of the Three Wise Men who brought gifts to the infant Christ according to medieval tradition and appears in the Bible as a reference to the stone itself in Revelations 4:3.
            • Jett
              • Origin:

                Mineral or word name
              • Description:

                Short, sharp, and cool, Jett is a contemporary choice that connotes both gemstones and jet engines. Rarely used before the 90s, John Travolta, and then George Lucas, helped to put the name on the map by choosing it for their sons.
            • Jezebell
              • Jynx
                • Kali
                  • Origin:

                    Sanskrit
                  • Meaning:

                    "black one"
                  • Description:

                    Cute name but be warned: Kali is the Hindu goddess of destruction, the fierce side of the goddess Devi.
                • Kane
                  • Origin:

                    Celtic
                  • Meaning:

                    "warrior"
                  • Description:

                    A name of multiple identities: a somewhat soap-operatic single-syllable surname, a homonym for the biblical bad boy Cain, and, when found in Japan and Hawaii, it transforms into the two syllable KA-neh. Kane also has multiple meanings: in Welsh, it's "beautiful"; in Japanese, "golden"; and in Hawaiian, "man of the Eastern sky."
                • Keiren
                  • Kodiak
                    • Origin:

                      Alutiiq
                    • Meaning:

                      "island"
                    • Description:

                      It's a bear, it's an island, it's (almost) a camera. It's starting to catch some parents' eyes as a wild, adventurous name.
                  • Lavina
                    • Origin:

                      English variation of Lavinia, Latin
                    • Description:

                      This vintage name is still used today among the Amish.
                  • Lethia
                    • Lilith
                      • Origin:

                        Assyrian, Sumerian
                      • Meaning:

                        "ghost, night monster"
                      • Description:

                        Lilith is derived from the Akkadian word lilitu meaning "of the night." In Jewish folklore she is portrayed as Adam's rejected first wife, who was turned into a night demon for refusing to obey him. Lilith is unrelated to most other Lil- names, with the exception of Lilita, which is the Latvian variation.