What is the difference between scarlet red and cardinal red




















The color is originally based on iron oxides family of Indian Reds , but due instability dyes based on aniline became the standard. As you noticed, all the most popular tones of Tuscan red possess pretty high values of green, what relates the whole family with brown colors. Most of the presented names are self-explanatory, maybe we should just clarify the name Falu Red, named after Falun, Sweden, where well-known copper mine is located. Bordeaux, on the other hand, is famous due their red!

Or maybe a bit later — there are many groups to explore out there! Some places are so well-known by rd color, different paint makers started naming their paints after them. The problem is each one of them interpret red differently. One such problem is Sedona:. Considering the importance of red, definitely the most powerful color in the spectrum, we can expect it as an official color or part of official palette at important organizations.

The word stizza is of Italian origin and it essentially means anger. One of the reds above is called Maroon, after the marron, what is a French word for chestnut. Some of the universities use more than one tone of red for their logotypes, team dresses, etc. We will continue with another set of red colors, this time, assigned with authority in general.

As you know, red is associated with aggression and mostly masculine power. Red, scarlet, carmine and crimson were colors worn by important and influential people many centuries before these colors got their names.

There is a whole family of red shades named after cardinals we have actually already seen some of them , who were among first who wore gowns of such colors.

Please be aware red color was not allowed for regular people in many cultures. The color red is strongly related to several brands in automobile industry and Ferrari is among most popular ones. Apparently, this is not enough because the manufacturers decided to associate a specific color for racing cars coming from Italy.

Ferrari Red is associated with FF1C00 as well. Traffic is of course closely related to danger, signals, safety, prevention and exclusion. According to different standards and acceptable tolerance we can find some of the mentioned colors with same names and different HTML codes. We have similar situation in the next group too. The power of color red was always present as dominant, being able to control the people and organisations.

We are not surprised finding it transformed into the world of giant corporations as well. Some of presented HTML codes are simulated hex values. Red color is extremely important in all areas, where we want to focus attention of the observer on something specific. While human eye yellow is most to yellow color, we use red for another reason, based on hard science. We all know how we use red color to mark important facts underlined in red, being in red numbers and the names in the next set of reds show exactly that.

We have more reds although quite brownish and purplish with names associated with heat, flames and fire:. The family of fire brick colors belongs to the scarlet reds and their name came from the color of bricks, which were and still are made in a fire.

One of the oldest red paints used by construction workers is definitely red. In America red paint is especially popular paint for barns. There are several reasons for that:. Here we can compare two web safe barn red colors with eight altogether paints mad by commercial paint-makers. The are relatively different but always more on the brownish, burnt side of the spectrum-. Here are several examples of paints, named after typical red or reddish cottages:. As you can see, these cottage red colors tend towards pink spectrum of colors.

On the other hand we also have a selection with relatively large amounts of yellow, thus being more orange or brown:. Ruby a chemical mixture of aluminum oxide with microelements, namely chromium is by far the most popular red color related to minerals. Of course BS stands for British Standards. With such popularity, we can only expect to have several ruby colors in numerous existing standards.

Garnet, geranium, and other gemstones are less known and standardization is much easier, although far from being simple. All kinds of chemical substances can be red or reddish colored, and some of the chemicals gave their names to specific red tints. In all cases, the color is dependent on the ion state in the substance.

The most known, yet far from being among most popular substances is rust. Here are some colors, related to that tones. To be honest, most of us would put all of them into browns. Most types of soil are brown and some of them can have pretty intensively reddish tones. In the majority of cases, the reason is iron oxide, which is roughly just a fancy name for rust.

While we slowly moved from inorganic to organic nature, we can now continue with plants, known by red color. Or — better — with tones of red, named after different plants. While everybody knows how a beetroot or paprika, two typically red plants look, we mostly associate word bittersweet with taste or feelings.

In this section we see tones of red in which are neither as bright as those in the earlier part of this page, nor for the most part are they heavily influenced by greens and blues, creating orange or purple tones. The end result is a range which can best be described as brown-reds. However, throughout this section, the shades get lighter, and other changes in colour contributions move the tone further away from red and towards brown and pink.

In this system of classification the colour of rosewood is almost a pure red, similar to a dark maroon, but this is such a deep shade, many would not consider it as red at all. It is similar in shade to claret, but comparing the two, the purplish tinge of claret will distinguish it.

Burgundy, named for another red wine, is slightly lighter than maroon, and with a faint purple tinge resulting from the addition of some blue light. The pigment carmine has already been described above, because of its associations with crimson, but its true colour is very close to burgundy. Rufous-red is a lighter shade than either rosewood or burgundy. Carnelian is a semi-precious gemstone of virtually the same hue, and the name of this mineral may also be used to describe this tone.

As in previous sections we finish here by extending the range beyond red to show how other tones are developed with a look at rust and terracotta. Both are sometimes described as red tones. However as can be seen from the RGB code for rust, although the intensity of red has been further increased, so too has the intensity of green light.

This, as we know, increases the orangy tone of the final hue, and rust is best described as an orangy brown. Terracotta has a still higher intensity of red light, but also includes higher intensities of both green light and blue light. As already pointed out, this makes the tone pinkish—a trend taken to its logical conclusion in the next section.

Finally, two colours which emphatically cannot be described as shades of red, yet frequently are:. Earlier it was stated that higher and higher intensities of red, green and blue light created lighter and lighter tones, ultimately resulting in white light.

In paint mixing, Pink may be created by adding white to red, but in terms of coloured light production, pink is not light red. Pink is a combination of very high-intensity red, with intensities of green and blue, which are also higher than in any tone described elsewhere on this page. Each of these primary colours contributes strongly therefore to a colour which has a red tinge, but which is approaching white.

This is pink. Magenta likewise is clearly not red. The colour magenta on this RGB model comprises equal proportions of red and blue. It is therefore midway between red and blue, and is pinkish purple in hue. Magenta, of course, is also one of the primary colours in the CMYK printing ink system, though printing ink magenta is rather different in tone to RGB magenta.

Although this article was primarily intended to differentiate between different shades and tones of red, as it has developed I trust it now serves two purposes:. GREAT article. I enjoyed it very much.

Thank you for taking the time to put this together and share it with us. I don't really read blogs and rarely leave comments but how interesting! Very good. I learnt a lot that I have peculated about for a long time. Thanks a bunch! It was still amazing to find out all this information though so thank you! Sev; Thanks Sev. I will have to try to get on and finish this series soon - probably with 'pink', followed by 'blue' and 'brown'. I happen to like red and its different shades and tones, so this hub's pretty interesting to me!

Thanks heaps for writing this : Voted up! Holly; thanks - your comments are always fun and enjoyable to read. No blue page just yet, but I do have one on orange and yellow. It has surprised me on this page how many people love the more muted tones such as rufous-red, burgundy and rosewood, rather than the more obviously bright colours like ruby or scarlet. Trying to choose between Rosewood and Rufous-Red was like pulling my fingertips off! Closer to red than orange but man, very awesome!

Gonna go huff your orange page now. Then trying to find the blue page. Especially I appreciate your thoughtful comments on the naming of the colour shades. It was a problem when writing the page to try to determine a name for a particular colour which could have general acceptance - on my 'Shades of Purple and Mauve' page, I actually include two images for 'Magenta' to illustrate the differences between tones created by different processes.

Regarding the colours you mention; I've already produced a page about 'Green', and am currently writing 'Shades of Yellow and Orange', as well as a 'Home Page' to the series, which should be published in a month or so. I love this page of yours. It's easy to find sites that say a colour is the colour it is, but most don't go into explanations of why. And then of course you'll find other sites that disagree, saying that that name is actually for some other shade, but again they don't say why.

However, while you make it clear that much of color naming is subjective, your reasoning gives great weight to your opinions. Thank you so much for taking the time to make this page. I look forward to hopefully one day coming across pages of yours for all the other colours. I'll cast votes for my favourites, in order: blue, green and orange. Thank you for a delightful comment which made me smile.

I wonder what colour his teacher thinks crimson is? I'm so pleased you found my hubpage. The site has a large membership of writers, and a wide variety of writing styles and abilities, but it's a great place to write if you have something you want to publish, but either cannot, or do not want to, create your own website. And there are some helpful people here to offer advice or encouragement if you need it.

I see you haven't published anything yet, but I thought I'd be the first to 'follow' you. Now you have to publish something! Thank you! My child was in a funk today, as his English teacher told him he was in error in stating that crimson was a derivative of red.

By the by, this is the first Hub page I've ever run across, and I look forward to discovering not only your other pages, but also the entire smorgasbrod of HubPages. Thanks also for the introduction to what will surely be time well spent! It would be nice if a common consensus on the naming of colours could be reached, but of course it won't be. Still, the best known shades and tones are quite distinctive and clear.

By the way, welcome to HubPages - I see your first page on orchids looks quite impressive, so I will return for a more in depth look. But for the moment, best wishes, and hope you enjoy writing on the site. Impressive details on so many tones of the colour red. Who would have thought there were names for all of them!

Then you go to a paint shop for colour charts and that blows you away. I also have green as my favourite colour Thanks Derdriu very much.

As I mention at the top of the page, it was really an interest in flowers which of course you share which gave me the idea. I keep a lot of cacti, and so many of those are of tones which I wanted to describe more accurately than to just call them 'red'.

Due to the favourable response I received for this article, I certainly intend to write some more in a similar vein, though you'll appreciate I don't produce many pages each month, and I have a few others already in the pipeline. Either purple and pinkish purples for a friend of mine or green because it's actually my favourite colour too will be next. And I'll do blue too, I promise! I'll have to try and start soon!

Greensleeves Hubs: Thank you for the excellent, precise and thorough definition of terms and explanation of the production and reproduction of the shades and tones of red. The poll is a welcoming touch which makes your readers feel involved and special! It would be most appreciated if you wrote your hubs on green my favorite and blue, both of which predominate along with reds in a series of illustrations and write-ups on which my sister and I are collaborating.

Red noun emotionally charged terms used to refer to extreme radicals or revolutionaries. Red adjective having any of numerous bright or strong colors reminiscent of the color of blood or cherries or tomatoes or rubies. Red Red is the color at the long wavelength end of the visible spectrum of light, next to orange and opposite violet. Popular Comparisons. Adress vs. Comming vs. Label vs. Genius vs. Speech vs.

Chief vs. Teat vs. Neice vs. Buisness vs. Beeing vs. Amature vs. Lieing vs. Preferred vs. Omage vs. Finally vs. Attendance vs. Latest Comparisons Tubercule vs. Glyptal vs.

Faucet vs. Com vs. Destroyable vs. Aboriginal vs. Coelomate vs. Ocean vs. Judge vs. Flag vs. Forbear vs. Awesomely vs. Fat vs. Sonhood vs. Ricochet vs.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000