I Found a Penny Today, So Here’s a Thought |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
  by DimrillHeavy and Weightless ColorsTo paraphrase a classic riddle, which weighs more: a pound of yellow feathers or a pound of red lead? Color may be a weighty subject, but the spectrum can't be gauged in terms of tonnage. The Swiss painter Paul Klee observed that color can be "neither weighed nor measured. Neither with scales nor with ruler can any difference be detected between two surfaces, one a pure yellow and the other a pure red, of similar area and similar brilliance. And yet, an essential difference remains, which we, in words, label yellow and red" ( On Modern Art, 1948). Klee was right—even though colors don't technically have weight, they can appear quite heavy and substantial or extraordinarily light and vaporous. [Read the entire article in my guest blog at ColourLovers.com.]
|


 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
  by atomicsharkMulticolored, MultilingualWhen we talk of colors, we can't help but be multilingual. Our pictorial world tour of exotic color names continues on through Italy, France, and Greece. [Read the entire article in my guest blog at ColourLovers.com.]
|





 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
Abecedarian's own Carte Blanche Atlas of Uncharted Territories ranked #1 in Stephen Saperstein Frug's top ten " still-fresh" resources on the Web. Frug explains that "lots of things on the web are evergreens: just as good a year from now as a year ago." He has collected "pieces whose virtue are not bound by historical moment" and that are "worth your attention." Thanks, Stephen! We're honored! Meanwhile, our own One-Letter Words: A Dictionary was recommended in the Harvard Independent's holiday gift guide. They call it "a lot more fun than a regular dictionary." Let's hear the Harvard cheer: "Rah, rah, rah!"
|


 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 Multicolored, MultilingualWhen we talk of colors, we can't help but be multilingual. Our world tour of exotic color names continues on through Italy, England, Greece, and Iran. Let's take a pictorial tour of these colorful cultures, in search of an exotic blue metamorphic rock that yields a bright pigment when crushed. [Read the entire article in my guest blog at ColourLovers.com.]
|

 |
A door of an Omani fort, or a make-your-own-lemonade stand?
The studs are supposedly to keep elephants from pushing the door down. Photo by Andrea.
|




 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 Microscopic Colors
The Micropolitan Museum exhibits an unworldly spectrum visible only through the lens of a microscope. Painter Wim van Egmond photographs spectacular microscopic masterpieces with ethereal color palettes. To capture these hidden treasures, he uses a Zeiss Standard light microscope and an old Zeiss Photo-microscope. Several methods of illumination are employed: bright-field, dark-field, phase contrast, differential interference contrast, and Rheinberg illumination. Van Egmond's Insectarium offers such specimens as the iridescent butterfly wing, whose tiny scales possess a microscopic texture that refracts light. Here we find lavender blue and green. The delicate wing of the mosquito, on the other hand, is covered with ting feather-like structures. Deep greens, golds, and aquas are apparent.
The Botanic Garden presents the vibrant red of grains of Lily pollen. The stem of the Mare's Tail, an aquatic flowering plant, offers dazzling purples and violets. The pine needle is ablaze with dark blue, light blue, bright red, and orange. [Read the entire article in my guest blog at ColourLovers.com.]
|

 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
  by mitzelman_99. Moonbows: Colors of the Night
Just as the sun illuminates rainbows during the day, reflected sunlight from the moon can reveal moonbows and moon halos at night. The most favorable time for a moonbow to appear is during a rain shower opposite a full or very bright moon. The night sky needs to be very dark, and moonbow watchers should stand with their backs to the moon. The colors of the moonbow will be dim pastels, in contrast to the vibrant hues of a daytime rainbow. A moon halo, on the other hand, is visible near the moon itself as a result of moonlight scattered through ice crystals in very high clouds. The colors of a moon halo tend to be brigher than a moonbow. The headlights of a car can create a phenomenon called a fog bow as they illuminate water vapor during misty conditions. Christian Fenn reported "Fogbows are more feebly colored than their Sun illuminated counterparts (rainbows) and usually appear whitish to the unaided eye." The rainbow appears throughout world mythology as a symbolic bridge between the divine and the mundane. Moonbows remind us that even on the darkest night of the soul, there is a glimmer of promise, however faint.
 Moonbow over the Pacific Ocean in Tahiti. by Pierre Lesage.
After the war was over I was coming home to you I saw a rainbow at midnight out on the ocean blue —Ernest Tubb, "Rainbow at Midnight," 1946.

by Thoth, God of Knowledge.
[Read the entire article in my guest blog at ColourLovers.com.]
|

 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 Colours of French ExtractionWhen we talk of colors, we're often speaking French. Many of our most exotic color names are of French origin. Let's take a pictorial tour of the colorful French countryside, where we'll encounter drunken monasteries, burrowing insectivorous mammals, jumping blood-sucking insects, earthy shadows, juicy fruits, and edible ornamentals. [Read the entire article in my guest blog at ColourLovers.com.]
|

 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
  by nalilo. No Name ColorsWe are the nameless colors. No mere words can encapsulate our radiance. We are questions without easy answers. We are puzzles for the sake of enigma. We are the cats that get your tongue, leaving you speechless in our wake. We are anonymous yet individual, handleless yet graspable, inscrutable yet deep. Would a color by any other name look as sweet? We are the nameless colors--the only colors truly beyond description. Art expert Joseph H. Krause notes that "In the English language, there are fewer than thirty words whose major function is to designate a specific color. These include auburn, azure, brown, black, blue, cerise, crimson, cyan, dun, ecru, gray, green, indigo, khaki, maroon, mauve, puce, purple, red, russet, scarlet, sepia, taupe, ultramarine, white, and yellow—they are all defined in the dictionary as either a specific location on the spectrum or with the phrase 'as having the color of' or 'being the color' followed by the names of objects bearing the color. . . . "There are also colors that are named after specific objects—animals, vegetables, or minerals; their names, having been in use for a long time, have come to be regarded, when used in the proper context, primarily as colors. Within this group are such names as beige, buff, lavender, lilac, orange, pink, sienna, umber, rust, turquoise, silver, gold, emerald, sapphire, and fawn. And some of these names have lost their original meaning and now stand for the color alone. However, even with this list, the number of color names remains fairly small. Therefore we use a variety of linguistic devices to extend it. - Combining names for a single color that has two hue qualities, e.g., yellow-green, blue-violet, yellow-orange
- Limiting names by the use of a modifier denoting lightness, e.g., dark blue, dark red, light red, light blue, light green
- Limiting names by the use of a modifier referring to the degree of color saturation, e.g., dull red, bright red, dull green, bright green
- Adding the suffix ish, e.g., yellowish, greenish, reddish
- Using such descriptive adjectives as mellow, harsh, garish, or subtle
[Read the entire article in my guest blog at ColourLovers.com.]
|

 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
  by Jonathan AssinkThe Electrifying Colors of CandlelightWarm, romantic, rich, enlivening, homey, flattering to the complexion, prayerful, even mysterious and mystical—there's nothing quite like the atmospheric glow of candlelight. Though typically classified as yellow or golden, a flickering candle flame actually exhibits all the colors of the rainbow. A touch of candlelight can offer emotional appeal, a festive air, or a seductive sparkle to virtually any color palette. According to Celtic lore, candlelight is the only illumination hospitable to shadow. "The ideal light to befriend the darkness, it gently opens up caverns in the darkness and prompts the imagination into activity. The candle allows the darkness to keep its secrets. There is shadow and color within every candle flame" (Anam Cara, A Book of Celtic Wisdom, 1997). A candle flame is composed of four distinct layers, visible to the naked eye. Each layer is a distinct color: white, light yellow, dark red (or brown or orange), and blue. At the base is a relatively cool blue layer (800° C), where the material of the burning candle is in contact with oxygen. A dark red cone surrounds the wick. Of low temperature (1000° C), this cone is formed of vaporized carbon molecules. Around the dark cone is a brighter layer of incandescent carbon (1200° C), light yellow in color. A thin outer envelope of hot white light (1400° C) is faintly luminous and tends toward yellow at the tip (where the carbon is completely combusted). A spectroscope reveals bright gaseous bands surrounding the outer envelope, colored yellow, green, blue, red, and violet. The magic of candlelight offers a gold leaf finish to even the most squalid surroundings. "Candlelight takes the edge off clutter, mutes the blemish of poverty—the unupholstered, the unplastered, the peeling the tarnished, the unfinished. Candlelight relegates dust and dinge to the shadows, antiques all objects in a golden sepia tone and casts an oscillating incandescence that romanticizes even the sparest of dwellings. Candlelight elevates the street-picked, the shabby, the scavenged to haunting grandeur" (Laren Stover, Bohemian Manifesto, 2004). [Read the entire article in my guest blog at ColourLovers.com.]
|

 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
  by MrUllmi. Lens Flares: Sunbeams at PlayStray rays of sunlight bouncing inside the lens barrel of a camera leave ghostly trails of stars, glowing halos, subtle rainbows, and specular orbs. Photographers may abhor these secondary traces of light, but lens flares serve a purpose: they create a sense of depth, focus intensity, provide an accent, and lend a dreamy glow to the scenario. The colors of lens flares are typically bright, desaturated, somewhat foggy, and somehow ethereal. Their charm lies in their uncontrolled, unpremeditated, and exuberant nature. Lens flares represent light at play within the tools we use to capture it. They offer brilliant highlights beyond our normal reach.  A lens flare bathes a street preacher in a veritable patchwork quilt of colors (left). A sunrise over a church spire creates a lens flare rainbow of bright reds and blues (right).
by Ouij and Guerito.
|
[Read the entire article in my guest blog at ColourLovers.com.]
|

Page 166 of 171

> Older Entries...

Original Content Copyright © 2025 by Craig Conley. All rights reserved.
|