Grey
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Grey | |
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Color coordinates | |
Hex triplet | #808080 |
sRGBB (r, g, b) | (128, 128, 128) |
CMYKH (c, m, y, k) | (0, 0, 0, 50) |
HSV (h, s, v) | (--°, 0%, 50%) |
Source | HTML/CSS[1] |
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte) H: Normalized to [0–100] (hundred) |
Grey or gray (see spelling differences) is an intermediate color between black and white. It is a neutral or achromatic color, meaning literally that it is a color "without color".[2] It is the color of a cloud-covered sky, of ash and of lead.[3]
The first recorded use of grey as a color name in the English language was in AD 700.[4] Grey is the dominant spelling in European and Commonwealth English, although gray remained in common usage in the UK until the second half of the 20th century.[5] Gray has been the preferred American spelling since approximately 1825,[6] although grey is an accepted variant.[7][8][importance?]
In Europe and the United States, surveys show that grey is the color most commonly associated with conformity, boredom, uncertainty, old age, indifference, and modesty. Only one percent of respondents chose it as their favorite color.[9]
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Etymology
Grey comes from the Middle English grai or grei, from the Anglo-Saxon graeg, and is related to the German grau.[10] The first recorded use of grey as a color name in the English language was in AD 700.[4]
Grey in nature and culture
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Fog in Venice
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Blocks of lead shielding a radioactive sample
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Column of volcanic ash from vent on Crater Peak, Mount Spurr
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A grey wolf.
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Cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point wear grey.
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Battleship grey or variations on this shade is the standard color for U.S. warships and those of many other navies, since it is less visible from a distance. The battleship pictured is the USS Missouri, built in 1944.
Grey in history and art
Antiquity through the Middle Ages
In antiquity and the Middle Ages, grey was the color of undyed wool, and thus was the color most commonly worn by peasants and the poor. It was also the color worn by monks of the Franciscan order, Cistercian Order and the Capucine Order as a symbol of their vows of humility and poverty. Franciscan monks in England and Scotland were commonly known as the Grey friars, and that name is now attached to many places in Great Britain.
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Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, a Cistercian monk, wore robes of undyed grey wool.
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Portrait of Saint Francis, the founder of the Franciscan Order, by El Greco. He also chose grey as the color of humility.
The Renaissance and the Baroque
During the Renaissance and the Baroque, grey began to play an important role in fashion and art. Black became the most popular color of the nobility, particularly in Italy, France and Spain, and grey and white were harmonious with it.
Grey was also frequently used for the drawing of oil paintings, a technique called grisaille. The painting would first be composed in grey and white, and then the colors, made with thin transparent glazes, would be added on top. The grisaille beneath would provide the shading, visible through the layers of color. Sometimes the grisaille was simply left uncovered, giving the appearance of carved stone.
Grey was a particularly good background color for gold and for skin tones. It became the most common background for the portraits of Rembrandt Van Rijn and for many of the paintings of El Greco, who used it to highlight the faces and costumes of the central figures. The palette of Rembrandt was composed almost entirely of somber colors. He composed his warm greys out of black pigments made from charcoal or burnt animal bones, mixed with lead white or a white made of lime, which he warmed with a little red lake color from cochineal or madder. In one painting, the portrait of Margaretha de Geer (1661), one part of a grey wall in the background is painted with a layer of dark brown over a layer of orange, red, and yellow earths, mixed with ivory black and some lead white. Over this he put an additional layer of glaze made of mixture of blue smalt, red ochre, and yellow lake. Using these ingredients and many others, he made greys which had, according to art historian Philip Ball, "an incredible subtlety of pigmentation."[11] The warm, dark and rich greys and browns served to emphasize the golden light on the faces in the paintings. .
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Rembrandt Van Rijn self-portrait, 1629. Rembrandt placed his figures against extremely complex greys, made up of many tones and hints of color to highlight the face in the center.
Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
Grey became a highly fashionable color in the 18th century, both for women's dresses and for men's waistcoats and coats. It looked particularly luminous coloring the silk and satin fabrics worn by the nobility and wealthy.
Women's fashion in the 19th century was dominated by Paris, while men's fashion was set by London. The grey business suit appeared in the mid-19th century in London; light grey in summer, dark grey in winter; replacing the more colorful palette of men's clothing early in the century.
The clothing of women working in the factories and workshops of Paris in the 19th century was usually grey. This gave them the name of grisettes. "Gris" or grey also meant drunk, and the name "grisette" was also given to the lower class of Parisian prostitutes.
Grey also became a common color for military uniforms; in an age of rifles with longer range, soldiers in grey were less visible as targets than those in blue or red. Grey was the color of the uniforms of the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, and of the Prussian Army during the Franco-German War of 1870.
Several artists of the mid-19th century used different tones of grey to create memorable paintings; Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot used tones of green-grey and blue grey to give harmony to his landscapes, and James McNeill Whistler created a special grey for the background of the portrait of his mother, and for his own self-portrait.
Whistler's arrangement of different tones of grey had an effect on the world of music, on the French composer Claude Debussy. In 1894, Debussy wrote to violinist Eugène Ysaÿe describing his Nocturnes as "an experiment in the different combinations that can be obtained from one color – what a study in grey would be in painting."[12]
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Portrait of Captain Augustus Keppel (1752) by Sir Joshua Reynolds.
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Portrait of Charlotte Walsingham, Lady Fitzgerald by John Hoppner (18th century). Grey was a color of high fashion in the 18th century.
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Private Edwin Francis Jemison of the Confederate Army, (between 1860 and 1862), a soldier in the American Civil War, wore a grey uniform. The war was sometimes called the War of the blue and the grey.
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An oak in the Forest of Fontainbleau, by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (about 1830).
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Arrangement in grey and black no.1 by James McNeill Whistler, (1871), better known as Whistler's Mother.
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The Self-Portrait of James McNeill Whistler (1872), also called 'Arrangement in grey" was a virtuoso concert of different tones of grey.
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Princesses Leopoldina and Isabel (seated), daughters of Emperor Pedro II of Brazil, wearing grey gowns (1855).
Twentieth and twenty-first centuries
In the late 1930s, grey became a symbol of industrialization and war. It was the dominant color of Pablo Picasso's celebrated painting about the horrors of the Spanish Civil War, Guernica.[13]
After the war, the grey business suit became a metaphor for uniformity of thought, popularized in such books as The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1955), which became a successful film in 1956.[14]
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Grey concrete was a popular building material for monumental works of modern architecture in the late 20th century. This is the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California (1959) by American architect Louis Kahn.
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The Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (1931). The Art Deco monument is made of reinforced concrete and clad in soapstone.
Grey in the sciences, nature, and technology
Grey storm clouds
The whiteness or darkness of clouds is a function of their depth. Small, fluffy white clouds in summer look white because the sunlight is being scattered by the tiny water droplets they contain, and that white light comes to the viewer's eye. However, as clouds become larger and thicker, the white light cannot penetrate through the cloud, and is reflected off the top. Clouds look darkest grey during thunderstorms, when they can be as much as 20,000 to 30,000 feet high.
Stratiform clouds are a layer of clouds that covers the entire sky, and which have a depth of between a few hundred to a few thousand feet thick. The thicker the clouds, the darker they appear from below, because little of the sunlight is able to pass through. From above, in an airplane, the same clouds look perfectly white, but from the ground the sky looks gloomy and grey.[15]
The greying of hair
The color of a person's hair is created by the pigment melanin, found in the core of each hair. Melanin is also responsible for the color of the skin and of the eyes. There are only two types of pigment; dark (eumelanin) or light (phaeomelanin). Combined in various combinations, these pigments create all natural hair colors.
Melanin itself is the product of a specialized cell, the melanocyte, which is found in each hair follicle, from which the hair grows. As hair grows, the melanocyte injects melanin into the hair cells, which contain the protein keratin and which makes up our hair, skin, and nails. As long as the melanocytes continue injecting melanin into the hair cells, the hair retains its original color. At a certain age, however, which varies from person to person, the amount of melanin injected is reduced and eventually stops. The hair, without pigment, turns grey and eventually white. The reason for this decline of production of melanocytes is uncertain. In the February 2005 issue of Science, a team of Harvard scientists suggested that the cause was the failure of the melanocyte stem cells to maintain the production of the essential pigments, due to age or genetic factors, after a certain period of time. For some people, the breakdown comes in their twenties; for others, many years later.[16] According to the site of the magazine Scientific American, "Generally speaking, among Caucasians 50 percent are 50 percent gray by age 50."[17] Adult male gorillas also develop silver hair but only on their backs, see Physical characteristics of gorillas.
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Christine Lagarde, head of the International Monetary Fund
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Actor Donald Sutherland
Optics of grey
Over the centuries, artists have traditionally created grey by mixing black and white in various proportions. They added a little red to make a warmer grey, or a little blue for a cooler grey. Artists could also make a grey by mixing two complementary colors, such as orange and blue.
Today the grey on televisions, computer displays and telephones is usually created using the RGB color model. Red, green, and blue light combined at full intensity on the black screen makes white; by lowering the intensity, it is possible to create different shades of grey.
In printing, grey is usually obtained with the CMYK color model, using cyan, magenta, yellow and black. Grey is produced either by using black and white, or by combining equal amounts of cyan, magenta and yellow. Most greys have a cool or warm cast to them, as the human eye can detect even a minute amount of color saturation. Yellow, orange, and red create a "warm grey". Green, blue, and violet create a "cool grey".[18] When no color is added, the color is "neutral grey", "achromatic grey" or simply "grey". Images consisting wholly of black, white and greys are called monochrome, black-and-white or greyscale.
Warm grey | Cool grey |
Mixed with 6% yellow. | Mixed with 6% blue. |
- RGB model
- Grey values result when r = g = b, for the color (r, g, b)
- CMYK model
- Grey values are produced by c = m = y = 0, for the color (c, m, y, k). Lightness is adjusted by varying k. In theory, any mixture where c = m = y is neutral, but in practice such mixtures are often a muddy brown (see discussion on this topic).
- HSL and HSV model
- Achromatic greys have no hue, so the h code is marked as "undefined" using a dash: -- ; greys also result whenever s is 0 or undefined, as is the case when v is 0 or l is 0 or 1
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Web colors
There are several tones of grey available for use with HTML and Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) as named colors, while 254 true greys are available by specification of a hex triplet for the RGB value. All are spelled gray, using the spelling grey can cause errors. This spelling was inherited from the X11 color list. Internet Explorer's Trident browser engine does not recognize grey and renders it green. Another anomaly is that gray is in fact much darker than the X11 color marked darkgray; this is because of a conflict with the original HTML gray and the X11 gray, which is closer to HTML's silver. The three slategray colors are not themselves on the greyscale, but are slightly saturated towards cyan (green + blue). Since there are an even (256, including black and white) number of unsaturated tones of grey, there are two grey tones straddling the midpoint in the 8-bit greyscale. The color name gray has been assigned the lighter of the two shades (128, also known as #808080), due to rounding up.
Grey pigments
Until the 19th century, artists traditionally created grey by simply combining black and white. Rembrandt Van Rijn, for instance, usually used lead white and either carbon black or ivory black, along with touches of either blues or reds to cool or warm the grey.
In the early 19th century, a new grey, Payne's grey, appeared on the market. Payne's grey is a dark blue-grey, a mixture of ultramarine and black or of ultramarine and Sienna. It is named after William Payne, a British artist who painted watercolors in the late 18th century. The first recorded use of Payne’s grey as a color name in English was in 1835.[19]
Animal color
Grey is a very common color for animals, birds and fish, ranging in size from whales to mice. It provides a natural camouflage and allows them to blend with their surroundings.
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A grey whale travels as much as 11,000 kilometers annually between its breeding waters in the Gulf of California and its feeding grounds in the Bering Sea.
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The grey wolf (canis lupus) is the largest wild member of the Canidae family.
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The African elephant is the largest land animal.
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The grey heron is a large bird found in Europe, Asia and Africa. A large colony of grey herons lives in the center of Amsterdam.
Grey matter of the brain
The substance that composes the brain is sometimes referred to as grey matter, or "the little grey cells", so the color grey is associated with things intellectual. However, the living human brain is actually pink in color; it only turns grey when dead.
Nanotechnology and grey goo
Grey goo is to a hypothetical end-of-the-world scenario, also known as ecophagy: out-of-control self-replicating nanobots consume all living matter on Earth while building more of themselves.[20]
Grey noise
In sound engineering, grey noise is random noise subjected to a psychoacoustic equal loudness curve, such as an inverted A-weighting curve, over a given range of frequencies, giving the listener the perception that it is equally loud at all frequencies.
Grey in culture
Religion
In the Christian religion, grey is the color of ashes, and so a biblical symbol of mourning and repentance, described as sackcloth and ashes. It can be used during Lent or on special days of fasting and prayer. As the color of humility and modesty, grey is worn by monks of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin, Franciscan order and Cistercian order.[21] Grey cassocks are worn by clergy or the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church.
Buddhist monks and priests in Japan and Korea will often wear a sleeved grey, brown, or black outer robe.
Taoist priests in China also often wear grey.
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Taoist priest in Wudang, China
Politics
Grey is rarely used as a color by political parties, largely because of its common association with conformity, boredom and indecision. An example of a political party using grey as a color are the German Grey Panthers.
The term "grey power" or "the grey vote" is sometimes used to describe the influence of older voters as a voting bloc. In the United States, older people are more likely to vote, and usually vote to protect certain social benefits, such as Social Security.[22][23]
Greys is a term sometimes used pejoratively by environmentalists in the green movement to describe those who oppose environmental measures and supposedly prefer the grey of concrete and cement.
Military
During the American Civil War, the soldiers of the Confederate Army wore grey uniforms. At the beginning of the war, The armies of the North and of the South had very similar uniforms; some Confederate units wore blue, and some Union units wore grey. There naturally was confusion, and sometimes soldiers fired by mistake at soldiers of their own army. On June 6, 1861, the Confederate government issued regulations standardizing the army uniform and establishing cadet grey as the uniform color. This was (and still is) the color of the uniform of cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point, and cadets at the Virginia Military Institute, which produced many officers for the Confederacy.
The new uniforms were designed by Nicola Marschall, a German-American artist, who also designed the original Confederate flag. He closely followed the design of contemporary French and Austrian military uniforms.[24] Grey was not chosen for its camouflage value; this was not appreciated for several more decades; but because the South did not have a major dye industry and grey dyes were inexpensive and easy to manufacture. While some units had uniforms colored with good-quality dyes, which were a solid bluish-grey, others had uniforms colored with vegetable dyes made from sumac or logwood, which quickly faded in sunshine to the yellowish color of butternut squash.
In the last twelve months of the war, the South was able to import uniforms made with good-quality blue-grey dye from Ireland, made especially for the Confederacy by a firm in Limerick, but by that time the war was on its way to being lost.
The German Army wore grey uniforms from 1907 until 1945, during both the First World War and Second World War. The color chosen was a grey-green called field grey, or feldgrau. It was chosen because it was less visible at a distance than the previous German uniforms, which were Prussian blue. It was one of the first uniform colors to be chosen for its camouflage value, important in the new age of smokeless powder and more accurate rifles and machine guns. It gave the Germans a distinct advantage at the beginning of the First World War, when the French soldiers were dressed in blue jackets and red trousers.
During World War II, most German soldiers wore the traditional field grey. The soldiers of the Afrika Korps of General Erwin Rommel wore a lighter grey uniform more suitable for the desert.
Some of the more recent uniforms of the German Army and East German Army were field grey, as were some uniforms of the Swedish army. The Army of Chile wears field grey today.
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Confederate General Stonewall Jackson at the Battle of Chancellorsville (1863). He was mortally wounded seven days after the picture was taken.
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Confederate soldier Andrew J. Winn (1838-1864), died from his wounds after the battle of Spotsylvania Courthouse (1864)
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German soldiers wearing field grey at the First Battle of the Marne (1914)
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The Afrika Korps uniform of General Erwin Rommel, the "Desert Fox" (1941–42).
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Soldiers of the East German Army wore grey until the fall of the Berlin Wall.
The grey suit
During the 19th century, women's fashions were largely dictated by Paris, while London set fashions for men. The intent of a business suit was above all to show seriousness, and to show one's position in business and society. Over the course of the century, bright colors disappeared from men's fashion, and were largely replaced by a black or dark charcoal grey frock coat in winter, and lighter greys in summer. In the early 20th century, the frock coat was gradually replaced by the lounge suit, a less formal version of evening dress, which was also usually black or charcoal grey. In the 1930s the English suit style was called the drape suit, with wide shoulders and a nipped waist, usually dark or light grey. After World War II, the style changed to a slimmer fit called the continental cut, but the color remained grey.[25]
By the second half of the 20th century, men's fashions in suits were determined as much by Hollywood as by London tailors. The 1950s and 1960s were the age of glory for the grey suit; they were worn by movie stars, such as Cary Grant and Humphrey Bogart, and by President John F. Kennedy, who wore a two-button grey suit. In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson was the first U.S. president to be inaugurated wearing an Oxford grey business suit; his predecessors had worn a formal cutaway coat with striped trousers for their inaugurations.[26] Grey suits also became the unofficial uniform of Madison Avenue in New York City, the center of the advertising industry.
At the beginning of the 21st century, the style was beginning to change; grey was considered monotonous and without character. Gradually the dark blue suit gained supremacy. At recent meetings of the G-20 and other international organizations, nearly every head of state of the world was wearing a blue business suit.
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William Holden and Humphrey Bogart in grey business suits in the 1954 film Sabrina. Bogart, as the serious older brother in the film, wears the darker grey.
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The official portrait of President John F. Kennedy, in a grey suit. (1963).
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Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff wearing a grey suit. (2009).
Ethics
In ethics, grey is either used pejoratively to describe situations that have no clear moral value; "the grey area", or positively to balance an all-black or all-white view; for example, shades of grey represent magnitudes of good and bad.
Folklore
In folklore, grey is often associated with goblins, elves and other legendary mischievous creatures. Scandinavian folklore often depicts gnomes and nisser in grey clothing. This is partly because of their association with dusk, as well as because these creatures were said to be outside traditional moral standards of black and white.
The writer J. R. R. Tolkien made use of this folkloric symbolism of grey in his works, which often draw upon Scandinavian folkloric names and themes. Gandalf is called the Grey Pilgrim; settings include the Grey Havens and Ered Mithrin, the grey mountains; and characters include the Grey Elves.
Sports
- In baseball, grey is the color typically used for road uniforms. This came about because in the 19th and early 20th century, away teams didn't normally have access to laundry facilities on the road, thus stains were not noticeable on the darker grey uniforms as opposed to the white uniforms worn by the home team.
Parapsychology
Believers in parapsychology say that those who are suffering from the mental illness of depression have grey auras.[27]
Associations and symbolism
In America and Europe, grey is one of the least popular colors; In a European survey, only one percent of men said it was their favorite color, and thirteen percent called it their least favorite color; the response from women was almost the same. According to color historian Eva Heller, "grey is too weak to be considered masculine, but too menacing to be considered a feminine color. It is neither warm nor cold, neither material or spiritual. With grey, nothing seems to be decided."[28]
Conformity
Grey is the color of conformity- not having any personality of its own, it adapts to any other color. It will look either dark or light, depending upon the color next to it.
Boredom
In Europe and America, grey is the color most associated with boredom, solitude and emptiness. It is associated with rainy days and winter. In the novel Faust, by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, the hero is pursued by four "grey women"; pain, necessity, guilt and misery, who follow him until his death.
Reflection and uncertainty
One of the rare positive associations of grey is with mental power and reflection; with the brain. In the novels by Agatha Christie, the detective Hercule Poirot refers frequently to the "little grey cells" of his brain which help him solve mysteries. Grey and blue, when put next to each other, have a positive association of reflection, while grey white and blue put together are associated with science.
Grey is also the color most associated with uncertainty; a "grey area" is a subject covered by a law or policy where there is lack of clarity.
Shadows and secrecy
Grey is commonly associated with secrecy and shadows. An eminence grise in politics is a person who controls and manipulates people in power in a sinister way without his role being known to the public.The phrase originated as a description of François Leclerc du Tremblay, the French monk who served as advisor to Cardinal de Richelieu.
Old age
Grey is the color most commonly associated in many cultures with the elderly and old age, because of the association with grey hair; it symbolizes the wisdom and dignity that come with experience and age. The New York Times is sometimes called The Grey Lady because of its long history and esteemed position in American journalism.[29]
Poverty and modesty
Grey is the color most often associated in Europe and America with modesty. As the color of undyed wool, it was the color worn by peasants and the poor, and was reputed to be the color of the clothing of Jesus Christ, and for that reason is the color worn by monks of the Cistercian and Franciscan orders. As the color of modesty, it is also associated with fairy tales; the character Cinderella takes her name from the color of cinders or ashes. Hers is the story of a poor virtuous woman who suffers humiliations from those above her until she meets her prince. Griselda or Griseldis—a similar character who exists in Italian, French German folklore, and in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales[30]—is known for her patience despite her suffering, and takes her name directly from the color grey.
See also
- Shades of grey
- Black
- Black-and-white
- Eigengrau
- List of colors
- Vin gris (grey wine in French)
- White
References
- ↑ W3C TR CSS3 Color Module, HTML4 color keywords Archived 14 December 2010 at WebCite
- ↑ Webster's New World Dictionary of the American Language, Third College Edition.
- ↑ Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, 5th edition, 2002.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Maerz and Paul A Dictionary of Color New York:1930 McGraw-Hill Page 196
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Heller, Eva, Psychologie de la Couleur, p. 224-242
- ↑ Webster's New World Dictionary of the American Language, 1964.
- ↑ Philip Ball (2001), Bright Earth, Art and the Invention of Coulour, pg. 214-215 (French translation).
- ↑ Weintraub, Stanley. 2001. Whistler: a biography (New York: Da Capo Press). ISBN 978-0-306-80971-2. p. 351
- ↑ Stefano Zuffi, (2012), Color in Art, pg. 310
- ↑ Eva Heller, Psychologie de la couleur- effets et symboliques, pg. 236-237
- ↑ Research Frontiers Site of the University of Arkansas (retrieved December 17, 2012)
- ↑ Library of Congress Science Reference Services
- ↑ Scientific American, "Why does hair turn gray?"
- ↑ Color Palette Archived 14 December 2010 at WebCite
- ↑ Maerz and Paul A Dictionary of Color New York:1930 McGraw-Hill Page 201; Colour Sample of Payne’s Grey: Page 117 Plate 47 Color Sample A9
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Eva Heller, Psychologie de la couleur- effets et symboliques, pg. 235
- ↑ The Bonus Years: The 'grey vote' may take the cake on Tuesday
- ↑ Grey vote
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Eva Heller, Psychologie de la couleur - effets et symboliques, pg. 236
- ↑ http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/inauguration/index.shtm#interesting |Johnson Library, University of Texas
- ↑ Arthur E. Powell The Astral Body and Other Astral Phenomenon Wheaton, Illinois:1927—Theosophical Publishing House Page 12
- ↑ Eva Heller, Psychologie de la couleur, effets et symboliques. (Pg. 226)
- ↑ Eva Heller, Psychologie de la couleur- effets et symboliques, pg. 234.
- ↑ Eva Heller, Psychologie de la couleur - effets et symboliques, pg, 435.
Bibliography
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External links
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