Talk:List of colors/Archive 1
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Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | → | Archive 5 |
Colors without articles
The page says this is for colors with associated articles. I'd assume that means direct links, not redirected links.
(redirects to brown)
Dark xxx
(redirects to xxx most or all of the time)
- I'm removing most/all of the following (if they redirect or aren't direct links) Zephyr103 23:42, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
Name | Hex (RGB) |
Red (RGB) |
Green (RGB) |
Blue (RGB) |
Hue (HSL/HSV) |
Satur. (HSL) |
Light (HSL) |
Satur. (HSV) |
Value (HSV) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dark blue | #0000C8 | 0 | 0 | 139 | 240 | 100 | 55 | ||
Dark brown | #654321 | 101 | 67 | 33 | 30 | 67 | 40 | ||
Dark cerulean | #08457E | 8 | 69 | 126 | 209 | 94 | 49 | ||
Dark chestnut | #986960 | 152 | 105 | 96 | 10 | 37 | 60 | ||
Dark coral | #CD5B45 | 205 | 91 | 69 | 10 | 66 | 80 | ||
Dark goldenrod | #B8860B | 184 | 134 | 11 | 43 | 94 | 72 | ||
Dark green | #013220* | 1 | 50 | 32 | 158 | 98 | 20 | ||
Dark Indigo | #310062 | 49 | 0 | 98 | 270 | 100 | 38 | ||
Dark Khaki | #BDB76B | 189 | 183 | 107 | 56 | 43 | 74 | ||
Dark Olive | #556832* | 85 | 104 | 50 | 81 | 52 | 41 | ||
Dark pastel green | #03C03C | 3 | 192 | 60 | 138 | 98 | 75 | ||
Dark Peach | #FFDAB9 | 255 | 218 | 185 | 28 | 27 | 100 | ||
Dark pink | #E75480 | 231 | 84 | 128 | 342 | 64 | 91 | ||
Dark salmon | #E9967A | 233 | 150 | 122 | 15 | 48 | 91 | ||
Dark Scarlet | #560319 | 86 | 3 | 25 | 344 | 97 | 34 | ||
Dark slate gray | #708090 | 112 | 128 | 144 | 210 | 22 | 56 | ||
Dark spring green | #177245 | 23 | 114 | 69 | 150 | 80 | 45 | ||
Dark tan | #918151 | 145 | 129 | 81 | 45 | 44 | 57 | ||
Dark tangerine | #FFA812 | 255 | 168 | 18 | 38 | 93 | 100 | ||
Dark Tea Green | #BADBAD | 186 | 219 | 173 | 103 | 21 | 86 | ||
Dark Terra cotta | #CC4E5C | 204 | 78 | 92 | 354 | 55 | 55 | ||
Dark turquoise | #116062 | 17 | 96 | 98 | 181 | 83 | 38 | ||
Dark violet | #423189 | 66 | 49 | 137 | 252 | 64 | 54 | ||
Deep Magenta | #CC00CC | 204 | 0 | 204 | 300 | 100 | 80 | ||
Denim | #1560BD | 21 | 96 | 189 | 213 | 89 | 74 | ||
Dodger blue | #1E90FF | 30 | 144 | 255 | 210 | 88 | 100 |
Pale xxx
I'm removing most/all of these. Zephyr103 23:54, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
Name | Hex (RGB) |
Red (RGB) |
Green (RGB) |
Blue (RGB) |
Hue (HSL/HSV) |
Satur. (HSL) |
Light (HSL) |
Satur. (HSV) |
Value (HSV) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pale Blue | #AFEEEE | 175 | 238 | 238 | 180 | 26 | 93 | ||
Pale brown | #987654 | 152 | 118 | 84 | 30 | 45 | 60 | ||
Pale chestnut | #DDADAF | 221 | 173 | 175 | 358 | 22 | 87 | ||
Pale cornflower blue | #ABCDEF | 171 | 205 | 239 | 210 | 28 | 94 | ||
Pale magenta | #F984E5 | 249 | 132 | 229 | 310 | 47 | 98 | ||
Pale pink | #FADADD | 250 | 218 | 221 | 354 | 13 | 98 | ||
Pale red-violet | #DB7093 | 219 | 112 | 147 | 340 | 49 | 86 | ||
Pale taupe | #BC987E | 188 | 152 | 126 | 25 | 33 | 74 |
More colours
Bordeaux
Please add Bordeaux (#99182C) ref.hexes of various colours, Ludek Stepan 22.1.2007
Russet
The page is missing Russet (Brown with a reddish tinge)
Tawny
The page is missing Tawny ( a light brown to brownish orange colour)
- I've put it in brackets next to Tenné - but maybe the colors aren't exactly the same and more colour info could be added to Tawny and then it could have a separate link here. Zephyr103 23:30, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
A pale grayish yellow. but i cannot find a color palate for it. Can someone add it with an image?
- It was listed at one point, IIRC, but I removed it because there was no article on the color. If there is an article on it, it should be listed, otherwise not.Tuf-Kat 01:15, Oct 4, 2004 (UTC)
- Red-link it then :-P Kim Bruning 13:18, 6 Nov 2004 (UTC)
Safety orange
I'd add Safety orange, but I don't know how to do the conversion. There is no Hex number on the page. Zhatt 21:44, July 18, 2005 (UTC)
Raw Sienna & Red Ochre
A couple of earthy colors that could be included (I think they have merit)... however, Raw Sienna has no Wikipedia article, only a Wiktionary article (http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/raw_sienna) where it is said to be #AE6938. Red Ochre has an article, but no listed co-ordinate of any color space. --Fëaluinix 13:34, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
Drab
Apparently it was once defined as a color somewhere between olive and puce (info like this and more gathered from the great book - Color: A Natural History of the Palette, by Victoria Finlay.)
Coyote brown, Flat dark earth & Coyote tan
These are color variations used on modern military body armor, pouches and sometimes arms. The USMC defines Coyote Brown as clor of their BA and pouches, I guess as Pantone 458. Might be worth an article. Tierlieb (talk) 13:57, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
Garnet
I've come across Garnet as the official colour of some universities. I hope someone can verify that I have the right shade ... hex #CC0033--Coppercanuck (talk) 20:54, 22 June 2008 (UTC)
Cherry (red)
Isn't this a colour? The best linguistic match I can find at the moment is cerise, but I don't think this is really the same colour. At least, not what I think of. —DIV (128.250.247.158 (talk) 03:11, 6 August 2009 (UTC))
Gamma corrected?
Are these colors gamma corrected? If not, then the values are correct and (most of) the visuals are incorrect. If so, then (most of) the values are incorrect and the visuals are correct. I am assuming they are not gamma corrected, as many displays require different gamma settings; The majority of displays work with 2.5 gamma, if one had to choose a default. Whatever the case, it should be explicitly stated somewhere in the article. If they are not gamma corrected as I am assuming, it is weird to think that the colors shown are not the actual colors! 137.186.22.226 14:28, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
- That concerns me as well. Moreover, this is being used on the "web" and the web has a well defined colour space (sRGB), so there is no issue about different displays. Also, as far as I know the #rrggbb notation is only used for sRGB colours. Incidentally I'm not sure where 2.5 comes from; I've always understood the typical CRT to have a gamma of about 2.2 and that is the value used in the sRGB correction - I wonder: is 2.5 is someone's rounding up of 2.2. My feeling is that, both here, and in the template used for the individual colours, the precise colours spaces need to be defined. --David Woolley 19:46, 5 December 2005 (UTC)
- It is indeed useless to speak of RGB-triplets (or HSV or CMYK) without stating the colorspace they are in. It is the same as stating "I weigh 68." 68 what? stones? kilograms?
- Currently used gammas are 2.2 for windows and 1.8 for macs. 83.160.162.119 18:37, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
- I just tested my monitor at work not too long ago, and it's gamma was 2.5 (2.45 I think, but don't quote me on that; whatever it was, it rounded to 2.5.) At any rate, whether it is 2.2 or 2.5, gamma makes a HUGE difference. The colors are completely different, not just a different brightness, but a different R:G:B ratio entirely.24.222.121.193 01:05, 22 April 2006 (UTC)
"but some argue that the actual sample colors displayed are incorrect due to lack of"? Is this really even an argument? They are displayed incorrectly if the display device does not have a gamma of 1.0 (linear), unless the colors are gamma corrected to the display devices gamma. I'm not sure if someone believes this to be incorrect? Please explain! 24.222.121.193 00:12, 5 July 2006 (UTC)
- Again: "A controversial view is that the actual color values below are correct, but the actual colors displayed are incorrect due to lack of gamma correction."? How is this controversial? Notinasnaid, can you please explain how the actual color values can be displayed correctly on a monitor, without a gamma of 1.0, properly without gamma correction? As far as I know, it is impossible by definition. 24.222.121.193 12:34, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- If a view is not shared by everyone, then that view is "controversial". The use of the word is therefore correct. I do not share the view that the colors displayed are "incorrect", or at least not because of any gamma issues. At this point, let's not embark on why, but let's seek more discussion on what other people think.Notinasnaid 12:48, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- I don't think that one person's disagreeing necessarily makes something controversial, but it's possible that there really is wide disagreement on this point. I don't know enough about gamma correction to join the technical part of this discussion. However, it seems that sentence is there mainly to warn users that the color on their screen isn't necessarily the actual, "official" color. If that's the case, let's reword and eliminate the gamma correction reference (which is confusing to most people who don't know what that is anyway). Something like "Note: Colors vary depending on output device." is really all that's needed. We can always provide a link to the Gamma correction article if more information is needed. If we need this sentence for some other reason, can someone please explain why? -- Laura S | talk to me 15:17, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- Wow, I just saw the Gamma Correction section - must not have been to this page in a while. This is definitely overkill. Most readers are not even going to understand it. I feel a need to reiterate what I just said - a simple notice that these colors aren't going to look the same for everyone, and that no one should take them as 100% accurate. Link to the technical explanation. Then leave it at that. But two paragraphs of technical detail about gamma before the list even starts is a little off-putting.-- Laura S | talk to me 15:42, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- Notinasnaid, please share how you hold the view that colors that are not gamma corrected are displayed properly on a display without a gamma of 1.0? Just use a 50% gray color as an example, and please show how this works. As far as I know, it is impossible by definition (not opinion).24.222.121.193 00:43, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- If we can agree on "Note: Colors vary depending on the gamma of the output device", with a link to gamma correction, then this is sufficent! I agree it is not this article's responsibility to explain gamma correction.24.222.121.193 00:43, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- I just edited the article. Let me know what you think. Notinasnaid, is this (what's in my last edit) still controversial to you, or is it OK? Thanks.24.222.121.193 00:51, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- Makes me happy! Although as always I reserve the right to complain at a later date :) By the way, 24.222.121.193, you contribute enough that it would be totally worth your while to get an account. (Here are some good reasons to get an account) -- Laura S | talk to me 02:23, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- Wow, I just saw the Gamma Correction section - must not have been to this page in a while. This is definitely overkill. Most readers are not even going to understand it. I feel a need to reiterate what I just said - a simple notice that these colors aren't going to look the same for everyone, and that no one should take them as 100% accurate. Link to the technical explanation. Then leave it at that. But two paragraphs of technical detail about gamma before the list even starts is a little off-putting.-- Laura S | talk to me 15:42, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- I don't think that one person's disagreeing necessarily makes something controversial, but it's possible that there really is wide disagreement on this point. I don't know enough about gamma correction to join the technical part of this discussion. However, it seems that sentence is there mainly to warn users that the color on their screen isn't necessarily the actual, "official" color. If that's the case, let's reword and eliminate the gamma correction reference (which is confusing to most people who don't know what that is anyway). Something like "Note: Colors vary depending on output device." is really all that's needed. We can always provide a link to the Gamma correction article if more information is needed. If we need this sentence for some other reason, can someone please explain why? -- Laura S | talk to me 15:17, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
The discussion seems to me to hinge on the definition of "correct". I hope I am able to present your argument correctly here, please say if I have not.
Your definition of "correct" is that the R,G,B components of a color should be direct, linear, controls of the brightness of those components. So 50% red, 50% green, 50% blue will be a grey with 50% of the brightness of 100%. A gamma value of 0.0 is therefore necessary to see the color correctly. Any real world display which does not adjust gamma to 1.0 (or use software for that effect) displays all colors incorrectly by this definition.
My definition of "correct" is "display as intended". All web colors and many other colors are specified using sRGB. sRGB defines primaries and defines a gamma of 2.2. So the colors were chosen (by the W3C, creators of HTML standards, and by others) in an expectation of gamma 2.2. The colors will only be a proper match if you are using a monitor that is calibrated, and doing color management, to map to the primaries and gamma actually in use. However, sRGB colors look about right on a monitor with gamma of about 2.2, and would look wildly wrong if simply displayed with gamma 1.0. On most monitors, colors like gray (50%,50%,50% as written) display in a color that is close to, but not exactly, correct by the definitions of the HTML color schemes (around 21% intensity).
As Wikipedia:WikiProject Color moves towards sRGB as the color standard for display in its web pages, so it becomes more difficult to state unconditionally that the colors shown, selected in sRGB, are incorrect except by stating this is a controversial view; or by defining exactly what is meant by correct.
I hope this clarifies why I have been struggling to change and/or understand the original article wording. Notinasnaid 10:43, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- Notinasnaid, thank you. I think you understand my point of view exactly. (For clarification, where you mention gamma of 0.0 you mean gamma of 1.0. I know this was just a typo.) And, now I understand YOUR point of view! I was assuming that the HEX and RGB values in this list were linear based, which is what everything I said was based on. If this is not true, then everything I said does not apply. So, are the RGB and HEX values in this color list linear-based and not gamma corrected?24.222.121.193 13:22, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
Sorting
Suggestions: list can be sorted alphabetically, another column for RGB value can be added. Jay 14:53, 11 Feb 2004 (UTC)
- Could it be sorted spectrally from red to violet? Of course this won't work for the browns but we could have two lists: one for the colours that can be so listed and an alphabetical one for those which can't. - Jimp 24May05
Annotating
I suggest adding a list of objects associated with each colour - To make the list more comprehensible. Few people can work with colours abstractly or even visually - We need to associate them to objects.
Python script
Anyone with some time on their hands can use this old python program to calculate color values based on hex triplets (which can be found in the page source) : User:Kim_Bruning/colorspace.py.
Cut and paste the source code into a file, chmod +x and use. :-)
Hmm, else maybe I'd make a CGI or so, but seems a bit of a waste of effort, since it's only going to be used only once again, and after that very rarely.
Hope this helps anyhow! Kim Bruning 13:18, 6 Nov 2004 (UTC)
Colors without Wikipedia articles
Somebody has a rule that this article cannot have ghost links in the color column. But what if somebody wants to create an article for a color?? Any ghost links to colors anywhere in Wikipedia?? 66.245.24.124 02:41, 18 Nov 2004 (UTC)
- The line at the top of the page reads "colors that have articles in Wikipedia". The article about the color is written first, then the color is added to the list, not vice versa.
- And I recommend that you sign up for an account. Denelson83 02:55, 18 Nov 2004 (UTC)
- If there weren't such a rule, I think the list would quickly get very long and unwieldy. Wiktionary is probably a better place for a complete list of colors, whereas Wikipedia is a good home for colors with encyclopedic merit. Tuf-Kat 13:22, Nov 18, 2004 (UTC)
- No option for Prussian Blue or French Blue? I'm sure I've seen those colors referenced a thousand times.
Buff
Just added Buff (colour). Can someone who knows how to create the {{Swatch}}, and the missing values in the table here, please add them! When done,Image:Buff.jpg can be deleted. Thanks - MPF 15:32, 19 Nov 2004 (UTC)
- Worked it out - MPF 16:31, 19 Nov 2004 (UTC)
HSV Updates 31-Dec-2004
Beige; had 0,0,0 (black) provided HSV.
Chocolate and cinnamon> the color boxes are uncorrect: Chocolate is shown like cinnamon color in real life and cinnamon like chocolate (darker)
Cobalt; my computed value varied in 1 digit; typo?
Khaki; HSL value instead of HSV value.
Navy Blue; HSL value instead of HSV value.
Tan; HSV I computed is different; maybe RGB change w/o HSV change.
CoyneT 03:57, Dec 31, 2004 (UTC)
Heliotrope
The RGB values and HSV values are not consistent. Someone with an artsy eye needs to correct this.
I'm working on this. Bluenectarine (talk) 05:54, 20 May 2009 (UTC)
Periwinkl
The RGB values and HSV values are not consistent. Someone with an artsy eye needs to correct this.
Color Coordinate Confusion
In looking around various colors and pigments, I note that there is a serious lack of consistency in the way in which color coordinates are presented. For example, in various places I see hex triplet, RGB, HLS (which some are calling HSL), HSV, and/or CMYK. However, there does not seem to be any consistency in which of these are used, or how these are used.
For example:
- In CMYK, some persons are using 0-100 (as in %) for the elements of the coordinate, while other persons are using 0-255.
- In HLS/HSV, some persons are using (0-360,0-100,0-100) (degrees,percent,percent), but others are using (0-240,0-240,0-240) (as in MS Windows).
- I've also seen confusion in the color spaces, where (see my earlier entry) someone entered HLS coordinates into a space intended for HSV.
In both cases, articles here in wiki (HLS, HSV and CMYK specify the use of 0.000-1.000 (as in percentage, but 1.000=100%). Shouldn't we be consistent to this regardless of real-world (Windows) usage or the niceties of percentage representation (using 100 instead of 1.0)?
There are also such peculularities as, in the case of this list, where the hex triplet and RGB values (in two cases) don't agree for a particular entry.
Then, in black, where 0-255 is being used for the CMYK entry there is an entry for "registration black" in which the CMYK values appear to be for white rather than black. (Afternote: This was a misinterpretation on my part; 255,255,255,255 is black. Just a strange way to code it...not really standard CMYK.)
What can be done to standardize all of this?
All the CMYK values should be striked out - they are meaningless. Most of these colors names here are referring to computer display RGB sets, and have no bearing with inks. Whereas there is a single matrix to convert between RGB and HSV, there are more than one way to convert RGB to CMYK, with Look-Up Tables depending on the inks. A lot of naïve users will for instance work in Photoshop in CMYK even though their output is never in CMYK inks. Furthermore the CMYK gamut is tiny compared with RGB, and you are losing color precision when working in CMYK. If you think that all you have to do is dial in the RGB value in Photoshop and read the equivalent in CMYK to print that here, you don't know what you're doing. Please read a book. Ppanzini 04:14, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
It occurs to me that it would be nice if there was a macro you could use, like the category macro for example, in which all you have to enter is the RGB and the rest of the values are displayed in a standard format.CoyneT 02:16, 24 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- (moved CoyneT's comments from top of page, not entirely sure I got them all in one chunk) There's not really anyone maintaining this page, CoyneT, as far as I know, so feel free to do whatever you want to standardize the formatting of the info. If you have any questions about manipulating the table syntax, feel free to let me know or leave a question on my talk page. Your macro idea is a good one, though I wouldn't have a clue how to implement it. Tuf-Kat 23:25, Jan 24, 2005 (UTC)
- Actually the "RGB" values are only accurate within the "sRGB" color space that has been standardized for the web (because this is the way the colors are effectively encoded in the table, with CSS or HTML color indices), but they are not necessarily those that you get in other "RGB" spaces calibrated differently.
- The same is true for the displayed "HSL" color space which is also calibrated for the web and completely defined in the CSS specification. There is however no such specification for CMYK on the web (because it was defined for printing with a completely light model which needs to consider also the color of the support, and as many calibations as there are paper types...) This is also true for the HSV colorspace (meant for printing) which is different from the HSL color space (meant for use on the web within CSS and HTML, and incidentally within SVG which also uses CSS).
- The most color names imported in CSSv2 come from X11, assuming that X11 is used on a display monitor calibrated for the sRGB colorspace. The exception are the 15 standard HTML4 color names which were defined directly in HTML4 (and kept unchanged in CSS, even if they were different in some older versions of X11). Today, modern implementations X11 uses the definitions found in the CSSv2 specification, instead of the many variants that could have existed on some older X11 platforms, and X11 explicitly binds its colorspace to "sRGB" (if colorspaces are implemented in X11 servers and display drivers), otherwise it binds it to the default "RGB" colorspace of the target display device (when it is not calibrated, assuming that it will work as if it was calibrated to sRGB).
- Note that display monitors used by professional photographs are calibrated (and this calibration is quite expensive compared to the price of commun monitors, it takes considerable time ; it requires some color reference grids and specific hardware, and a complex procedure). But the result of this calibration is that these screens NO LONGER use the "sRGB" color space, but a better CIE-based colorspace, recalibrated according to the measured light properties of the subpixel pigments, and to their disposition and geometry...
- verdy_p (talk) 05:40, 18 November 2009 (UTC)
Source?
I've only looked at a few of the color names, but none provided a source for its definition (RGB etc.). Some said it was an approximation only at least. I then thought the author(s) quietly assumed X11 color names (as computer graphic artists tend to do), but not all of the names here appear in that list (and vice versa). I know of a few instances where the same English color name stands for different RGB (or whatever) values, e.g. X11 vs. Crayola or X11 vs. this list (Khaki etc.). Crissov11:21, 26 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Agree totally - see my paragraphs below.Ppanzini 04:07, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
Magenta
Should it be replaced with Fuchsia?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RGB_colours#Standard_color_names Lists fuchsia as 00FF00, not magenta.--Aioth 12:13, Mar 3, 2005 (UTC)
- 0x00FF00 is Green in RGB. (see? R:00, G:FF, B:00), perhaps you mean 0xFF00FF? And that html color names scheme is strangeish, though I can guess at why they might use those names. Light primaries and secondaries are called red, green, blue and cyan, magenta, yellow respectively, so the naming is correct. Kim Bruning 15:42, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- In the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RGB_colours#Standard_color_names list, the names are derived from the HTML standard (you can see the source reference at this link: HTML 4.01 Standard: Colors). For some weird reason, the designers of the HTML standard named it "fuchsia", rather than "magenta", which is why that name is shown on that list. CoyneT 23:08, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- IIRC the HTML colours were introduced in Internet Explorer (2.0 IIRC) circa 1996, so Microsoft got to define the size and contents of the colour space, and they simply used the standard Windows colour set; hence only 16 colours, and the strangeness of some of the names ("aqua" and "fuschia" instead of the more-widely-accepted "cyan" and "magenta" respectively, and "green" being 008000 (office green or British Racing Green) instead of 00FF00). Interestingly, IE2 recognised "magenta" and "cyan" but rendered them wrongly (as a light green and a brown IIRC). The larger HTML colour set (about 140 colours) recognised by most if not all of today's browsers was introduced in Netscape Navigator shortly afterward; I think it a pity that it still hasn't been formally recognised by the W3C, as it should be. --92.40.239.164 (talk) 09:17, 27 June 2008 (UTC)
- You're wrong : the W3C has recognized a limited list formally, within the CSS v2 specification, which is also referenced within the specifications for SVG, HTML5, and XHTML. verdy_p (talk) 05:44, 18 November 2009 (UTC)
- IIRC the HTML colours were introduced in Internet Explorer (2.0 IIRC) circa 1996, so Microsoft got to define the size and contents of the colour space, and they simply used the standard Windows colour set; hence only 16 colours, and the strangeness of some of the names ("aqua" and "fuschia" instead of the more-widely-accepted "cyan" and "magenta" respectively, and "green" being 008000 (office green or British Racing Green) instead of 00FF00). Interestingly, IE2 recognised "magenta" and "cyan" but rendered them wrongly (as a light green and a brown IIRC). The larger HTML colour set (about 140 colours) recognised by most if not all of today's browsers was introduced in Netscape Navigator shortly afterward; I think it a pity that it still hasn't been formally recognised by the W3C, as it should be. --92.40.239.164 (talk) 09:17, 27 June 2008 (UTC)
In fact, looking at that article, I see that the link (identified as SRGB) should be leading to the Standard; it is broken. CoyneT 23:10, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC)My mistake; it is the W3C article itself which is broken, not the wiki page. CoyneT
What is this article?
Are these Windows system colours? CSS colour keywords? Netscape web-safe palette keywords? We can't just say that "amber is #FFBF00". We have to say who calls #FFBF00"amber"? —Michael Z. 2005-04-12 21:31 Z
- This particular article is simply a list of articles about colours. The specific information you suggest for any given colour should be in the appropriate article. If you know, for example, whence comes the definition for amber as "
#FFBF00
" please add it to that article. --Phil | Talk 10:00, Apr 13, 2005 (UTC)
Michael Z. makes the point clear. See my interventions below.Ppanzini 04:07, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
Working slow
Hey, I am trying to edit things little to help and all...but I am from work and someone is passing back and remove wht i am creating BEFORE I get to finish what i am doing. I am ESL, and at work...gimme a chance, alright? If I am editing and five minutes later the article I was trying to document further is deleted...I will get so discouraged...I'll just give up. Is it too much to ask? Thanks, Zab
Posted by user:207.107.15.2 on 19:40, October 5, 2005 (UTC)
- Sorry, Zab, I didn't know you're ESL and taking your time, but when a Wiki editor sees an article without any content or links that don't belong, they get removed. What you could do is create an article in anouther program, such as word, and paste it into Wikipedia, or, if you're editing a article, use the edit locktemplate to stop others from interfearing. Also, you might want to consider registering, as users editing with only their IP address appear as if they may be vandals. Zhatt 22:19, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
Quite alright! I was just stating, not taking it personal. I prefered staid anonymous because I wanted to help without the credit. Just helping. I am following your advise. *rolls sleeves* Now, what /is/ and what /is/ not appropriated here, just to be sure I wont work on something that is not wishable and would be better in wikidictionary(Just related to this List of Color). Thanks! --E-zab 17:19, 6 October 2005 (UTC)
- I notice that you're want to work towards a name for each of the web colors, and I assume an article to go with each. Many of the web-safe colors already have names, but they do not warrant an article each, as there is not enough information about them individually. If you would like to add some information about the web colors, I would suggest working on the Web colors article itself.
- Also, try not to write each sentence on a new line. It takes up space and makes it harder for impaired people who use text-reading programs. Thanks, Zhatt 18:04, 6 October 2005 (UTC)
Safety Orange correction
The swatch for Safety Orange on this page was listed as FF4F00, which didn't look quite right. The actual article for the color said it was FF9900, and I corrected the swatch to match the article.
Liastnir 12:53, 26 December 2005 (UTC)
Organized by family instead of alphabetically
It would be more useful if this page was organized by family, e.g. all the red-like colours in one section, all the blue-like colours, etc. instead of alphabetical. If we can agree to this, I can help reorganizing them into broad categories.--Sonjaaa 05:23, 28 April 2006 (UTC)
- Personally, I disagree. I don't think in color groups, I think alphabetically. It all depends who you want it to be useful to. Also, such a rearrangement is likely to lead to duplication, as people look only in the place where the color is in their mindset, and add it, while it is actually in a different group. And I don't think duplication is desirable. Notinasnaid 09:53, 28 April 2006 (UTC)
- I agree with Sonjaaa because if someone was looking for a colour to paint their front room with, and wanted a blue, they would have to scroll down until they saw the colour.--Elevenzeroone 13:35, 25 November 2006
- Wikipedia would be a very bad choice for color selection for painting the front room. Its colors don't correspond to those available from commercial paint manufacturers!Notinasnaid 10:04, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
- Oh yes. Ah well you know what I meant. Elevenzeroonnechat /what i've done 20:06, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- I think there should be an alphabetical list, and shades of colors has them grouped. Zephyr103 03:36, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
- Oh yes. Ah well you know what I meant. Elevenzeroonnechat /what i've done 20:06, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
- Wikipedia would be a very bad choice for color selection for painting the front room. Its colors don't correspond to those available from commercial paint manufacturers!Notinasnaid 10:04, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
- I agree with Sonjaaa because if someone was looking for a colour to paint their front room with, and wanted a blue, they would have to scroll down until they saw the colour.--Elevenzeroone 13:35, 25 November 2006
I support having colors listed in families. In fact, I support having colors listed alphabetically as well. In addition, to force one often used style of presentation over the other is POV. There's nothing wrong with using multiple sort styles. Any useful application program would do that. If multiple sort styles make the article too big, a complementary article, such as List of colors by hue or some other designation can be created and linked to this one. After all, Wikipedia is not a paper encyclopedia! ;-) Rfrisbietalk 11:42, 28 April 2006 (UTC)
- Couldn't Category:Shades_of_color be expanding to include the template tables inline, or putting them together in a new page work also? PaleAqua10:22, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
Alphabetical order is nice too, but I would personally recommend sorting by hue, then by saturation, then by value. --88.110.211.3 23:19, 1 August 2007 (UTC)
International Klein Blue
Is there any reason why International Klein Blue is listed as Klein Blue, not International...? IKB is the name I know the colour as, and first I went to the I section. --kylet 21:06, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
- It's supposed to be the names of articles, so it should match whatever the article is. This page is probably out of step. Notinasnaid 21:25, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
- I moved it from K to I --kylet 21:56, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
- The Klein Blue is a registered trademark and copyrighted in its exact definition. It cannot be "international". Reproducing it is forbidden without a licence. So the IKB cannot be the same as the real Klein Blue. verdy_p (talk) 05:47, 18 November 2009 (UTC)
- I moved it from K to I --kylet 21:56, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
Isolation?
I'm not sure if this has already been discussed, don't know much about this stuff, but how about links to see the color in isolation? For example, Prussian Blue appears much darker and almost green because it is surrounded by lighter colors. Jinnentonik 20:53, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
Inclusion of colors
It looks like there's been some disagreement here lately about which colors to include on the page. There is currentlydiscussion on this topic at Wikiproject Color. Please join the discussion there and help us reach a consensus about how to handle this information, rather than continuously adding and removing colors, which seems to be hurting feelings more than helping the page. Thanks!-- Laura S | talk to me 15:12, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
chocolate and cinnamon
I'm no colour expert, but this is hardly a technical point: surely chocolate and cinnamon have been accidentally switched in the list?
green & blue?
wheres blue-green?Cute 1 4 u 20:39, 1 July 2006 (UTC)
- Do you mean teal (color) or cyan? — Ashmodai (talk · contribs) 07:55, 14 November 2006 (UTC)
What to include
(discussion moved from Gamma Corrected? section)
We need a clear and technically sound definition of EXACTLY what these colors are, in terms of what color model they are defined under.24.222.121.19318:04, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
- I agree completely. There's actually been some pretty lengthy discussion over at the Color Wikiproject on this and several related topics. One of the things we finally agreed on was exactly what you just said - that we need to provide proper and documented definitions for any colors we include on Wikipedia. Of course, once we agreed on it we didn't take much action that I know of (my fault as much as anyone). You should take a look, it's really interesting and maybe you'll want to get involved? -- Laura S | talk to me 18:56, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
- Ok, let's see if I can add any clarity here. This page is called "List of colors" but that isn't a good name. The article starts out by saying it is a list of articles about colors and it is that which I have taken as the definition for any work I've done on this page (for example, removing colors which get added that don't have articles). So, if this page has any color swatches or color values, it seems to be that it is simply a mirror of what each article has to say.
- So, that moves the question: what color model is used to define the colors in each article. These seem to come under two headings: "sRGB" and "made up". We can say that sRGB is used for each of the colors defined with a name by W3C (see Web colors). That's a lot of them, and let's consider them first. If all of these colors are defined using sRGB, then this is a full definition of color model. Gamma 2.2 and other attributes.
- The other ones are a problem, not just for this page, but for any claims Wikipedia has to accuracy; this is something the project is attempting to deal with. A proposed standard says that a color name only be given a value if a reputable standard defines it; implying that all other "made up" color values have to go.
- Now, there will be many other articles about colors which have every encylopedic reason to exist (cultural, artistic, religious...). But in my view these remaining colors cannot have color values, since they would have to be made up (=original research), and so, while they would still be linked from this page there would be no swatch or color value here.
- Hope this is some use. Notinasnaid 09:41, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
- First, I'm thinking we should move this discussion to a new heading since we're not really talking about gamma correction anymore. But to the topic at hand. For colors not in a defined color space, I think we should still definitely list them if they are notable in some way (tricky to determine though), and just leave out exact color values for those with no actual color space. I'm on the fence about swatches - I agree about the dangers of "making up" values for the swatch, but they can be extremely useful for illustrative purposes. If we did include a swatch we'd definitely need to provide a notice about non-exactness, etc. I wouldn't be heartbroken if we removed the swatch though.
- Regarding lists and whether to include colors with no articles, how are other lists handled? I seem to recall seeing some lists with redlinks. For things like "List of books by author X", it makes sense to include everything, even those without articles. I'd rather see completeness. If we're only including colors with articles, it would make more sense to lose the list and just point to the Colors and Color stubs categories. I wouldn't mind at all having a list of all notable colors (again, very tricky to determine what belongs, but I'd be willing to take the challenge if others would as well) including those with no articles. Then we can work on creating any missing articles. Obviously we'd need to change the description text of this list. And yes, I would support removing color articles if they are truly non-notable or plain made up. I would really support merging color articles into families or other groupings where it makes sense. -- Laura S | talk to me 15:09, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
- I just found this Pokemon style guide which lays out guidelines for not only how to style a Pokemon-related article, but also what sorts of things to include. Articles not following the style guide get tagged with a template to mark them for cleanup. We should do something similar for colors, so that when these sorts of discussions come up, we have a solid any inevitably (and understandably) upset people to that page to explain the decision. We're already close with the Color Wikiproject, but formalizing some of these items might help. Thoughts? -- Laura S | talk to me 21:07, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
I fail to see what purpose this "List of Colors" is serving. The premise is preposterous. There are millions of colors and the ones that have been given a name are either broad categories or tied to specific physical processes (pigments, dyes, phosphors, etc...). The Pantone system is one such naming scheme that is strictly defined within the well-defined production ability of designated inks. So where do these colors, named here come from ? Who measured any of these colors to produce the implied spectra, let alone the questionable RGB values specified here ? If Wikipedia insists everywhere to quote the source, then quote the source ! Naïve readers will keep asking for a particular shade ("Add Russet, please, it's a shade of Red" - thank you; now that's helpful) but we're dealing here with a reference web site, not somebody's fancy. So, what is the source for all these colors ? What is "teal" or "safety orange" ? If there is an ANSI or ISO standard for "safety orange", than it must be printed here - it is likely that any such standard color will be specified as per its method of fabrication (which dye combination will yield the color, for instance), and where, in the CIE XYZ color model, the color falls. Now that would be a reference. What are the standards here ? The SMPTE/EBU color bars ? The Resistor Color Code ? The Pantone Matching System ? HTML4 Color Keywords ? X11/SVG Color Keywords ? There seems to be confusion as to the bounds of the color naming at play here - if we are strictly dealing with color names as defined and accepted within the W3C (from sources such as X11), and bound by computer display capabilities, then fine, there is no problem with reproduction of physical color appearances. But elsewhere in Wikipedia, we have RGB triplets supposedly relating to actual pigments such as Prussian Blue. One needs to draw a line.
I also read something odd in the "Color" page stating "The disadvantage of the systems, however, is the lack of an exact computational model of attaching a name to a given color sample." This is wholly incorrect. For a method of computing Munsell values, check out www.brucelindbloom.com (a good source of information in general).
Second, the gamma issue. Gamma is the transfer function of the Luminance in a display system. It has only a limited effect on hue and perception, depending on your definition of hue; but it has a more correllated effect on the perception of saturation. Still, newer models of color appearance, such as the CIECAM 02 imply more elaborate relationships between factors which were previously oversimplified as totally de-correllated. Most Wikipedia's user's computer displays will not be calibrated, so it is important to state clearly what the intended viewing conditions are for any color swatch to appear reasonably true to a common standard. The viewing conditions should be explicit as to the display RGB space, and its gamma function if that is not standardized as well. A gamma of 2.2 is by far the most practical, and the most widespread. It is the standard for television imaging, and the vast majority of computer displays - besides, it is the gamma standard that maintains the lowest average deviation from the human visual system's Lightness function, the L*. So a gamma of 2.2 is a good choice. I've read references to a gamma of 1.0 here and I find that puzzling - if that is meant to say that the display is left uncorrected, then the resultant gamma will be in the range of 2.5 for most displays. If it means that a gamma of 1 is set in the power function exponent, then good luck...
Third, the issue of gamut. Naturally-occuring colors - those for which, in general, there are names - very often fall totally outside of the reproduction capabilities of computer displays, and many pigments and dyes. Tell me how, then does one define in RGB, a pigment the perception of which, under a specific type of illumination, falls completely out of your average display's gamut ? People here seem to think that sRGB will define any colour. sRGB has a gamut which is closely derived from the television PAL/SECAM primaries. It has a pretty low gamut efficiency of 35% with respect to Lab, which means that it cannot account for 65% of all colors perceptible by humans. This is not a flaw in sRGB, it is simply that it was not designed for the purpose that is intended here; it was designed as a lowest-common working RGB space to connect computer displays to television images and printing inks. It is a compromise. So what about all these colors that fall outside of the sRGB gamut ? Assuming that care was used in deriving their RGB values from some properly measured full spectrum function, and that an ICC rendering intent was used, the values printed here will be wrong whether in terms of hue or saturation - this means that many colors which appear different in the physical world (again, under a certain type of illumination if they are reflective) will appear the same by the time their values are clamped to a tiny color space like sRGB. Simply stating that the "colors are right" but it all depends on the display gamma is extremely misleading. The specific hues of the red, green and blue chromaticities of a user's computer display will not guarantee that any color is correct, irrespective of the display gamma.
To summarise, I would say that what is needed here are a number of printed definitions in the page:
- Source of the information for each color. Are the values traceable to some NIST standard ? - To what color naming scheme a color belongs to. This means that a color like "white" has a different meaning (totally absctract) than some physically realizable Pantone name/value. Some colors are conceptual, others designate physical samples. - Intended display conditions: ICC profile for display (with gamma value), intended ambient illumination for viewing, and intended surround intensity for display. There are standards for this. - Methodology used in converting from spectral data to RGB values. - Inherent perceptual error induced by RGB gamut clipping, in Delta E units. - Metamerism indications: example values and/or swatches under daylight, tungsten, fluorescent illumination.
Best, and world-renowned references for people interested in color science. Works by:
Bruce Lindbloom (work on gamut and color companding). Mark Fairchild (color appearance models). Roy Berns (many works, including color appearance, multi-spectral imaging, and evaluating the accurate color recording of museum artifacts). Charles Poynton (specialized in television and film imaging, great discussions of gamma). R.W.G. Hunt (many works on color measurement and reproducibility).
A simple Google search on these persons' names will yield pointers to their books or their websites.
Check out also the following URL for an indication of what accurate measurement is:
http://physics.nist.gov/Divisions/Div844/facilities/color/facilities.html
Ppanzini 19:08, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- As the first paragraph makes clear (but sadly not the title of the article), this is a list of articles about colors. It is a pity it contains so much original research, but this is just a large mirror of the faults of the other articles, rather than a fault in itself. This page, like the articles, should give the provenance of the name (i.e. which reliable source defined it thus), and shouldn't have these terrible made up CMYK values (unless, of course, the value is defined as CMYK, in which case the use of a swatch is highly questionable). There is an interesting discussion already going on, and people who know about color would be especially welcome: please see Wikipedia Talk:WikiProject Color. The process of improvements to meet any standards has been at a standstill for many months. Notinasnaid 19:15, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
Agreed, but all the values should then be striked out, not just the CMYK. There is not basis for the RGB or any other values, except when they come from X11 and HTML4. The color names adopted by W3C make no claim to be names connected to anything outside of computer displays - they are totally arbitrary. Even then, for what display ? A Trinitron CRT with P22 phosphor or a 5000$ EIZO display with native AdobeRGB chromaticities ? The only way to make X11 color names somewhat reproducible is to define for which color space. For the web, that obviously is sRGB at 2.2. I'm reluctant to start striking out things because it will seem more like amputation than laparoscopy... Some sort of consensus should be struck in the background before one makes sweeping changes here which will not be understood by the vast majority.Ppanzini19:27, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
- I agree that they should all be struck out except in particular situations. Unfortunately there are far more people enthusastically reporting, converting and coining any color they find or like the sound of than there are people cleaning up. The convenient thing about CSS colors is that their purpose is to be displayed in a browser; they aren't consistent but we can at least arrange that much. I would like a "health warning" against each swatch, however. If you think this is bad, just look at Green.Notinasnaid 19:32, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
I think that what should be done is separate colors into categories - those colors which are for computer display only (W3C standards) should have the Hex and RGB values maintained, as well as the HSV/HLS. All the CMYK should be striked out - they are totally meaningless. Those color names which are not in any way connected with X11/HTML4, etc... should be put under a different section, and have all their color coordinates removed. An header text should explain, in a preventive measure why these colors do not have exact coordinates - ie they are subjectively designed by users. My definition of "Brass" is wholly different from another person's. A special category should be made for primary and conceptual colors (Red, Green, Blue, Black, etc...)
I have asked a colleague who's affiliated with the Munsell Color Science Lab, and he confirms to me that they are heavily frustrated with Wikipedia. Some students have been encouraged to update pages, but the whole Wikiality of users who have no clue tends to override. I'm afraid it's a case of pearls to swine, and somehow this is indicative of what's fundamentally wrong with Wikipedia. I believe that the founders of this otherwise brilliant idea have gone public with accepting there are big problems with the methodology. The only way out, as far as I'm concerned, is to create a two-tiered system - certified experts to produce and moderate the core of articles, and a public sandbox for the rest of wikiality. Ppanzini 03:55, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
Page importance
Recently the page rating was changed from "high" to "top" with the comment "a list of colors is of top importance in a color project". Actually I disagree. I think the list of colors is a real problem, and certainly not important compared to properly explaining about colors. The idea that a list of colors is important seems to flow from the idea that the list can be definitive. However, proposed guidelines would remove most color values, because they are original research. Notinasnaid 08:07, 6 September 2006 (UTC)
- Yeah, my mistake. I changed it back. 24.126.199.129 08:34, 6 September 2006 (UTC)
Missing colors
I went through the "Shades of..." template series for blue, violet, yellow, cyan, green, red, brown, and orange to check for colors that were missing from this page. Ecru (colour), Tangerine yellow, Baby blue, Myrtle (color), Falu red, Auburn (color), Liver (color), Mahogany (color), Seal brown, UNECE Amber, Cosmic latte, Magnolia (color) all were missing; the color coordinates for these colors are listed on their respective pages. Two other colors didn't have a color coordinate infobox, but there was the Hex code for their display on the (violet) template: Iris (color) = #5A4FCF; Palatinate (colour) = #742E68. Lastly, there was purpure, the heraldic equivalent of purple, which shouldn't even be listed on the (violet) template. 24.126.199.129 08:34, 6 September 2006 (UTC)
- I would recommend not using the RGB numbers from the Template:Shades of violet for Iris (color) or Palatinate (colour). Both are approximations, and at this point I'm fairly convinced that the colour for Palatinate is wrong. I think I may have been too bold. See Template_talk:Shades of violet for more details/discussion.PaleAqua 22:07, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
Maize, the yellow from the University of Michigan isn't there --Mackilicious 22:24, 27 September 2007 (UTC)
- That's because you can see the color of "maize" in a picture like the one at right. -jacobolus (t) 03:24, 28 September 2007 (UTC)
- Is there a variety of blue known as russian blue ? —Preceding unsigned comment added by85.154.153.68 (talk) 17:44, 7 June 2009 (UTC)
Am I Grue (the Wanderer)?
- I notice octarine, a fictional color. Anybody recall the Klingon name for ultraviolet-blue from The Final Reflection, or have a copy? Also, real colors, no mention of feldgrau? Trekphiler 14:10, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
External Links
I think this page could use at least one link to a RGB HEX color chart. Im putting the best one (in my opinion) back —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 151.203.144.101 (talk • contribs).
- This page isnt about RGB colors, it's a list of articles about color. That link might be appropriate at web colors, which I see it is already at. Problem solved :)--Quiddity 06:10, 26 September 2006 (UTC)
Mismatch with 'Dark slate gray' article
I accidentally noticed different color here w.r.t. the target article. Assumed that the target is correct. Is it? I'm too lazy now to search for an authoritative source. saimhe 23:53, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
- The problem is that most articles are not sourced, and I suspect cannot be sourced without original research (like using a color meter). The best this article can do is reflect what the other article says: the article can and probably should be marked as unsourced. Wikipedia:WikiProject Color is trying to address this, but there seem an unlimited number of people ready to add new unsourced color information compared to those with the inclination to clean up! Notinasnaid 11:14, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
list of colors
re list of colors, there were people saying x,y,z colours have been missed, bear in mid pantone have 22,000 colouras listed, the human eye has 1.5million colours it can detect-colour blindness accepted. So sure russett green, scary flouros( safety orange etc), will be missed. The great thing is with the list it means that a nudge up, or down and you will get to the colour you're looking for.
You obviously do not know what XYZ color cordinates are, and I wonder where you got that figure fof 1.5 millions colors ? Based on Lab delta-e just-noticeable differences ? Under what conditions of surround and motion ?
I also fail to see the connection with Pantone, which is an ink mixing standard. Please read "Billmeyer & Saltzman Principles of Color Technology", it's an introductory textbook on color science that might help you understand the topic.Ppanzini 04:02, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
html errors
There is an international standard for colors ised on the WWW: http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-color/#html4 Several of the basic colors are incorrectly shown in this article, example: Green is shown as #00FF00, which is the code for LIME in the standard The correct html code for GREEN is #008800 This is very misleading for readers and needs urgent correction. Syrenab 17:12, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
- You mean #008000 (not #008800)... but anyway, to make it consistent, the articles and the "shades of..." templates would need to be modified. It seems that the problem colors are green and purple. Zephyr103 00:07, 31 December 2006 (UTC)
Sources
Do we really need to cite the sources on such an article as this one? It's just a bunch of colors and the cooresponding code. Why1991 04:13, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
- I'm assuming that it is important to weed out errors:
- 1. If we talk about sample values and codes, then yes, it is enough for them to appear credible in associated articles. A more elaborate warning would be enough instead of{{unreferenced}}. The text of {{original research}} is also too general in this case.
- 2. The introduction is decently referenced and references are merely not wikified -- except perhaps their verifiability is questioned.
- 3. As for the remaining part which is generated by {{shades of *}}, situation is similar to (1) because everything depends on correct categorization in associated articles... or does it not?
- --saimhe 07:28, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
- Everything needs sources in Wikipedia: there are no exceptions. In my view it is particularlty important for these because many of the values are original research and should be removed. Citing sources would allow the rest to be eliminated. Notinasnaid 09:25, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
Sable?
What in the world is "sable"? As far as I can tell, it's dark, and possibly simply black. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by PrescitedEntity (talk • contribs) 20:30, 8 January 2007 (UTC).
- I suggest you look it up. --76.16.151.77 01:50, 7 July 2007 (UTC)Kino Lala
- Sable is the traditional heraldic name for black (anything that looks like black or is very dark and uniform, can be assumed to be black and named sable in heraldry, which limit the number of distubct colors (colors in heraldry are named "metals" and "furs", with the exception of "sable" which is neither; additionally one fur, "hermin", is in fact made of patterns of black on white; heraldic colors are also remappable to conventional patterns of black on white background ; this explains why black has a special heraldic status as it remains black when it maps to the "sable" pattern). verdy_p (talk) 09:45, 18 November 2009 (UTC)
References
The article now includes references. So the "source" box message must be deleted. If there is any text that lacks references one can use {{citationneed}} or similar in the concrete paragraph or text line. --Altermike 07:58, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
- There is a reference to http://xona.com/colorlist/. However, I do not believe this satisfies the requirements of a reliable source. A reliable source would be something like an ISO standard, W3C paper and so forth. As it stands, anyone can create a web site with a list of color values and call it authoritative. For more on this discussion and a proposed policy which will see the deletion of many or most color values, see Wikipedia Talk:WikiProject Color. Notinasnaid 08:10, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
Camel
I first noticed this on the United Kingdom article, in the legend underneath the map at the top of the article. I had never heard of the colour "camel" before, so I wanted to find out more, but unfortunately, there isn't a camel (color) article. By clicking on the 'legend' link in the United Kingdom article, I arrived atthis page, where the image also uses the word "camel". So seemingly it is a colour. I was hoping that someone here could tell me a bit about it, and maybe even create an article. Thanks. RedvBlue 22:27, 20 March 2007 (UTC)
Namespace
This page seems like it doesn't belong in the article namespace but the wikipedia space. It doesnt seem to cover a notable encylcopedic topic but rather a Wikipedia related resource. I don't know if this has been brought up already, sorry if it has. Scottydude talk 02:10, 23 April 2007 (UTC)
- I cannot speak for the maintainers of this list, but like most lists its claim to notability lies in the linked articles. Only colours that are notable enough to have an article of their own should be present in the list, and so the list acts as an index for those other articles. — Lee J Haywood 07:56, 23 April 2007 (UTC)
- I can see how that would be a valid idea, but I still seem to feel that this pages purpose isn't for educating readers on them, and their wiki/HTML code, but rather for the education of Wikipedia editors who use these colors in the markup. Scottydude talk 16:16, 23 April 2007 (UTC)
- Maybe instead of a namespace change this page should be changed to look more like a disambig page and general resource for colors. Scottydude talk 16:18, 23 April 2007 (UTC)
- I don't understand why you think that the article is for Wikipedia editors. I personally use the list to choose colours for web pages that I produce, but that has absolutely nothing to do with Wikipedia itself. — Lee J Haywood 19:19, 23 April 2007 (UTC)
Colors Absent
Okay, which colors are we missing on the page? If those missing colors are added soon, I will try to find information on them for their pages.
- An infinite number of colors are missing from this page; color is not discrete. --jacobolus (t) 17:12, 20 May 2007 (UTC)
Re: Oh, okay.
Something I Just Noticed...
Okay, for those of you who have the Crayola markers (not the original set) I want you to know this:
The color "Sea Foam Green" is actually spring green.
The color "Brushfire" is actually either coral or carnation.
The color "Blue Mirage" is actually either robin egg blue or sky blue.
The color "Crocodile Green" is actually pine green.
The color "Tropical Violet" is actually either lilac or wisteria.
The color "Desert Flower" is actually orchid.
The color "Sandstone" is actually apricot.
So, I just wanted to share what I've just noticed. Thank you.
- What do you intend to mean by "actually"? What's the source? Dicklyon 02:07, 23 May 2007 (UTC)
- Re: No source, Dicklyon. I color with the Crayola markers, and I happened to compare them to the colors here on Wikipedia, hence why I used "actually." Just to make things known for everyone that uses the thick Crayola markers.
- First off, these are all personal observations. Second, there can be perceptual differences involved, depending on the substrate used, and the illumination present. The differences might not due to creative naming on the part of Crayola. — Nahum Reduta [talk|contribs] 16:23, 26 February 2008 (UTC)
Shades of... templates
I have compared the set of colours in the various 'shades of...' templates with the ones in this article. There are 87 colours here that aren't in the templates, and 18 in the templates that either aren't listed here or have a different RGB code. Does anyone think that the templates should include all the colours in this list, and if so how do we decide which shade(s) a colour belongs to? Thanks. — Lee J Haywood 20:49, 31 May 2007 (UTC)
Hazel
Does anyone know which color is the closest to the eye color hazel? I'm guessing olive.--Kino Lala 18:26, 8 June 2007 (UTC)
- There doesn't seem to be an definitive answer to that, since 'hazel' is pretty much any shade of brown, see hazel eye colour. — Lee J Haywood 20:09, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
Add a list to requested article Dots (toy)
If my requested article Dots (toy) gets created, can someone add a color list? (they can be found on the site) Wanna see it? Then go see User:Superjustinbros./Requested Articles. I want actual colors being shown. (like on the list) Superjustinbros. 21:58, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
- I have no idea what you're talking about, but in general the specific colors of a toy don't belong on this page. --jacobolus (t)00:35, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
Okay, we can just put a list.
Apple green and poison green
Could you add apple green and poison green?
I managed to find #629632 for a colour called "green apple", however I always thought that it is much lighter that that. I could find no code for poison green; you might know more ways to find it than I.
83.85.40.203 22:08, 8 July 2007 (UTC)
- To the right is an image of some green apples (those on the left ;). As for poison, here are some possibilities. --jacobolus (t) 03:40, 28 September 2007 (UTC)
Deleted some entries without articles
I just did some minor cleanup to this page and removed several entries that aren't links to articles. You can see what I removed here [1] in case some of the removed colors deserve articles. PaleAqua 11:52, 22 October 2007 (UTC)
Protect this page?
There seems to be an increasing number of daily vandalisations to this page, most all of them by IP addresses (rather than accounts). Is it time to apply first-level editing protection?
----starfarmer (talk) 06:03, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
- I whole heartedly concur; I've only undone a distasteful change myself, and it's high time that they were cut back, even if only a little.
Bee Purple
I'm wondering if this color should be listed in fictional colors given that bees can see into the ultraviolet. See the article about nectar guides as well as the section about it in Pollinator. PaleAqua (talk) 21:15, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
- It's still the name of a fictional color from a work of fiction. Wikipedia is not a place for original research and speculation of this kind. --Orange Mike | Talk 21:03, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
- Yes the name is fictional, though my thoughts on removing it are based on the fact that does not have an associated article. I'm not saying that "bee purple" merits one either. I also think by the way that Htun, Tang, Burn, Ultraviolent and Infradead do not belong in the list. I am going to remove all of them. I don't see why real colors and fictional colors should have any different rules about being included in this list. PaleAqua (talk) 03:59, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
Two concerns
- Would the category "Colors by hue" be more appropriate for the second section? Shade is typically used to denote mixtures with black, or dark colors in general parlance.
- Is it possible to provide Lab color space coordinates, or is the system not "compatible" with RGB and HSV?
— Nahum Reduta [talk|contribs] 16:18, 26 February 2008 (UTC)
- There is a defined conversion between RGB and HSL or HSV, even though the colors specified are not absolute. L*a*b* can be an absolute space, once the whitepoint is specified. So, to get to L*a*b* you first have to define the RGB to make it absolute, and define an L*a*b* white point, specify a chromatic adaptation transform if the chosen white points don't match, and then do the conversion. I don't think there's enough information available to do this in any kind of standardized way. I'd go the other way and remove a bunch of the unsourced data in RGB and other spaces. Dicklyon (talk) 18:00, 26 February 2008 (UTC)
Web Safe
Why the wide, color-filled, distracting "Web Safe" column? That's an obsolete concept. Nobody in the Web development community cares about "Web safe" colors anymore, because almost nobody uses 256-color monitors anymore. In fact, the concept has been obsolete for years.
Even back when it had relevance, there were a number of studies showing that, for various technical reasons, it was mostly bogus. Now it's a fossil of a bogosity. That column should be deleted. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.22.241.251 (talk) 07:24, 26 April 2008 (UTC)
- This whole article is a fossil of bogosity. But feel free to kill the “web safe” column with my blessings. --jacobolus (t)01:23, 27 April 2008 (UTC)
with associated articles?
In the first sentence of the article, what is meant by "...with associated articles." ? Kingturtle (talk) 18:48, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
- This is meant to be a list of color articles. In other words if the color does not merit it's own article it probably should not be in the list. For example the "dark ...", "deep ...", 'light ...", "medium ..." and "pale ..." color names should probably get removed. PaleAqua (talk) 19:22, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
Colors not showing up
On my computer, Alice Blue and Azure (Web) are showing up white. I'm viewing Wikipedia on a PC running Windows XP, using a Preview 768M monitor in 32-bit color mode. I don't immediately see a problem with the wiki page format. Does anyone else experience this sort of thing? —Preceding unsigned comment added by24.62.152.29 (talk) 07:08, 20 July 2008 (UTC)
- They are almost white (probably best described as blueish white). If you have your monitor's contrast, brightness or color temperature controls mis-adjusted, they might show up as white. VMS Mosaic (talk) 21:11, 20 July 2008 (UTC)
Calling Glynis Wein
Would it be worth adding the "color mixes" for four-color printing? TREKphiler hit me ♠ 09:41, 13 August 2008 (UTC) By SpOrOs —Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.130.128.133 (talk) 14:22, 23 August 2008 (UTC)
Coordinates
I think this list does a disservice by featuring coordinates. To me it seems that it would be better to remove the coordinates and have one of more sample for each color, perhaps with a major hue(s) column that might classify the color as a blue, green, red, or the like. PaleAqua (talk) 00:50, 21 January 2009 (UTC)
Incorrect entries
Auburn: The hex triplet #6D351A (in RGB: 109, 53, 26) is not identical with the RGB value (111, 53, 26).
Blue-green: The hex triplet #00DDDD (in RGB: 0, 221, 221) is not identical with the RGB value (0, 223, 223).
Burgundy: The hex triplet #900020 (in RGB: 144, 0, 32) is not identical with the RGB value (128, 0, 32).
Islamic green: The hex triplet #009000 (in RGB: 0, 144, 0) is not identical with the RGB value (0, 153, 0).
Lavender purple: The hex triplet #967BB6 (in RGB: 150, 123, 182) is not identical with the RGB value (150, 120, 182).
Please correct these entries! --88.78.15.205 (talk) 20:32, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
I'm going through these colors alphabetically. I am correcting the hex/rgb/hsv values as I find them. I'll be sure to go over your list to see that I didn't miss anything.Bluenectarine (talk) 06:44, 20 May 2009 (UTC)
computer displays?
Quote from the article: Additionally, computer displays have a somewhat limited gamut, so many colorful pigments cannot be represented on screen at all and computer simulation of the natural world is, at best, a rough approximation. End quote Shouldn't this claim be explained in more detail? How large is the difference between real colors and the colors that can be displayed on the current monitors? How can this be measured? Has the extend of this gap changed a lot since this claim has been written in this article? When I watch movies om my PC (new monitor) I don't notice that much difference any more between real colors and the colors on my display. 193.190.253.147 (talk) 12:09, 10 April 2009 (UTC)
- The comment should be made according to what's in reliable sources, or removed. It's partly true, but somewhat overdrawn I think. Dicklyon (talk) 03:45, 11 April 2009 (UTC)
Sanity Check
I ran a sanity check on everything in the table. I verified that the red, blue, and green values under "RGB" match the values under "Hex triplet," and that the hue, saturation, and value reported under "HSV" match what is calculated from the RGB values using the conversion formulas in the HSV article.
I only report the first error discovered in each color; some colors may have more than one.
Color Name | Column | Expected | Found |
---|---|---|---|
Arsenic | Hue | 206° | 230° |
Azure (color wheel) | Value | 100% | 50% |
Blue (RYB) | Value | 100% | 99% |
Bole | Hue | 9° | 30° |
Carolina blue | Blue | 221 | 227 |
Cordovan | Hue | 355° | 337° |
Fallow | Hue | 33° | 45° |
Fire engine red | Green | 32 | 22 |
Lavender (web) | Hue | 240° | 245° |
Lawn green | Saturation | 100% | 98% |
Light blue | Hue | 195° | 240° |
Light pink | Saturation | 29% | 100% |
Light Thulian pink | Hue | 340° | 330° |
Lime green | Saturation | 76% | 67% |
Magenta (dye) | Green | 31 | 21 |
Magic mint | Hue | 153° | 150° |
Magnolia | Hue | 262° | 247° |
Maize | Blue | 93 | 94 |
Majorelle Blue | Saturation | 64% | 67% |
Maroon (X11) | Hue | 338° | 333° |
Mauve Taupe | Hue | 343° | 285° |
Maya blue | Hue | 205° | 210° |
Medium blue | Value | 80% | 40% |
Medium carmine | Saturation | 70% | 69% |
Medium lavender magenta | Saturation | 25% | 80% |
Medium purple | Hue | 260° | 270° |
Medium spring green | Hue | 157° | 150° |
Mint green | Hue | 120° | 140° |
Misty rose | Hue | 6° | 337° |
Myrtle | Saturation | 55% | 54% |
Navajo white | Hue | 36° | 32° |
Office green | Saturation | 100% | 80% |
Old Lace | Hue | 39° | 40° |
Old Lavender | Hue | 304° | 270° |
Old Rose | Hue | 359° | 330° |
Olivine | Hue | 87° | 58° |
Orange (RYB) | Hue | 36° | 60° |
Orange-Red | Hue | 16° | 5° |
Pale carmine | Saturation | 70% | 69% |
Payne's grey | Blue | 79 | 72 |
Persian blue | Hue | 229° | 248° |
Persian green | Hue | 173° | 135° |
Persian indigo | Hue | 258° | 249° |
Persian red | Hue | 0° | 5° |
Persian pink | Hue | 328° | 330° |
Persian rose | Hue | 326° | 318° |
Persimmon | Hue | 22° | 10° |
Plum (web) | Saturation | 25% | 80% |
Powder blue (web) | Hue | 187° | 220° |
Psychedelic purple | Hue | 292° | 290° |
Pumpkin | Saturation | 91% | 90% |
Purple (X11) | Green | 32 | 92 |
Purple Taupe | Hue | 311° | 285° |
Raspberry | Hue | 338° | 337° |
Raw umber | Hue | 35° | 34° |
Red (pigment) | Hue | 358° | 0° |
Red (RYB) | Hue | 5° | 0° |
Rich carmine | Hue | 342° | 356° |
Rose pink | Hue | 320° | 330° |
Rose quartz | Hue | 303° | 330° |
Rose Taupe | Hue | 0° | 330° |
Royal purple | Hue | 267° | 273° |
Ruby | Hue | 337° | 338° |
Russet | Hue | 26° | 25° |
Salmon pink | Hue | 350° | 14° |
School bus yellow | Hue | 51° | 36° |
Sea Green | Saturation | 67% | 77% |
Shamrock green | Hue | 156° | 120° |
Sienna | Blue | 45 | 46 |
Sky Blue | Hue | 197° | 210° |
Slate gray | Saturation | 22% | 33% |
Smalt (Dark powder blue) | Hue | 220° | 200° |
Spring bud | Hue | 80° | 88° |
Tangerine yellow | Hue | 48° | 33° |
Taupe | Hue | 27° | 30° |
Taupe gray | Hue | 320° | 30° |
Tea rose (orange) | Blue | 121 | 194 |
Tea rose (rose) | Hue | 0° | 337° |
Terra cotta | Saturation | 60% | 70% |
Thulian pink | Hue | 333° | 330° |
Tomato | Hue | 9° | 15° |
Tyrian purple | Hue | 325° | 277° |
Ultra pink | Saturation | 56% | 48% |
United Nations blue | Hue | 216° | 210° |
Upsdell red | Green | 32 | 22 |
Venetian red | Hue | 356° | 0° |
Vermilion | Blue | 52 | 51 |
Violet (RYB) | Red | 134 | 2 |
Wheat | Saturation | 27% | 26% |
White | Hue | 0° | –––° |
Xanadu | Value | 53% | 52% |
Yellow (RYB) | Saturation | 80% | 99% |
Yellow-green | Hue | 80° | 60° |
Note that the inconsistencies are not confined to this article; the identical inconsistencies appear in the articles on the individual colors, or at least the few that I have checked. Capedia (talk) 21:42, 10 July 2009 (UTC)
Aqua/Cyan
Why are Aqua and Cyan marked as having the same hexadecimal numbers?--Launchballer (talk) 17:17, 17 August 2009 (UTC)
- It's technically the same color, have a look at those articles: Aqua, Cyan and Web Colors. --84.164.93.134 (talk) 21:40, 10 October 2009 (UTC)
Seems a little off
Where are "off-white" and "off-black" on this list? 174.46.172.13 (talk) 09:48, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- There are now more off-white colors on the list. —Preceding unsigned comment added by66.69.50.54 (talk) 02:08, 8 December 2009 (UTC)
Could you add shades of primary colors and black
I see shades of pink and etc and looks to beautiful to look and understand. Can you add other colors, black and white shades. thank you —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ureddy (talk •contribs) 11:38, 13 November 2009 (UTC)
- I've added more off-white and off-black colors to the list. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.69.50.54 (talk) 21:34, 4 December 2009 (UTC)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_colors
Han Blue & Han Purple have same RGB therefore not different, i.e both look the same blue —Precedingunsigned comment added by 86.157.56.171 (talk) 12:39, 19 November 2009 (UTC)
Assessment comment
The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:List of colors/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.
Under two of the 'percentage' columns on this page, why are there several values over 100%?
IGGR (talk) 03:52, 12 April 2008 (UTC) I'm building a color names swatch file from this article,so as I check my work,I am correcting the hex/rgb/hsv values as I find them. I use the Adobe Photoshop color picker and crosscheck with a color conversion web page. I hope to complete the alphabetical list. Bluenectarine (talk) 05:48, 20 May 2009 (UTC) |
Last edited at 13:24, 21 February 2012 (UTC). Substituted at 20:42, 3 May 2016 (UTC)
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