[(128)] In this single chart the eye readily distinguishes some three hundred different colors, each of which may be written by its hue, value, and chroma. And even the slightest variation of one of them can be defined. Thus, if the principal red were to fade slightly, so that it was a trifle lighter and a trifle weaker than the enamel, it would be written R5.1/4.9, showing it had lightened by 1 per cent. and weakened by 1 per cent. The discrimination made possible by this decimal notation is much finer than our present visual limit. Its use will stimulate finer perception of color.
[(129)] Such a very elementary sketch of the Color Solid and Color Atlas, which is all that can be given in the confines of this small book, will be elsewhere presented on a larger and more complete scale. It should be contrasted with the ideal form composed of prismatic colors, suggested in the last chapter, paragraphs [98, 99], which was shown to be impracticable, but whose ideal conditions it follows as far as the limitations of pigments permit.
[(130)] Besides its value in education as setting all our color notions in order, and supplying a simple method for their clear expression, it promises to do away with much of the misunderstanding that accompanies the every-day use of color.
[(131)] Popular color names are incongruous, irrational, and often ludicrous. One must smile in reading the list of 25 steps in a scale of blue, made by Schiffer-Muller in 1772:—
| A. | a. | White pure. |
| b. | White silvery or pearly. | |
| c. | White milky. | |
| B. | a. | Bluish white. |
| b. | Pearly white. | |
| c. | Watery white. | |
| C. | Blue being born. | |
| D. | Blue dying or pale. | |
| E. | Mignon blue. | |
| F. | Celestial blue, or sky-color. | |
| G. | a. | Azure, or ultramarine. |
| b. | Complete or perfect blue. | |
| c. | Fine or queen blue. | |
| H. | Covert blue or turquoise. | |
| I. | King blue (deep). | |
| J. | Light brown blue or indigo. | |
| K. | a. | Persian blue or woad flower. |
| b. | Forge or steel blue. | |
| c. | Livid blue. | |
| L. | a. | Blackish blue. |
| b. | Hellish blue. | |
| c. | Black-blue. | |
| M. | a. | Blue-black or charcoal. |
| b. | Velvet black. | |
| c. | Jet black. |
The advantage of spacing these 25 colors in 13 groups, some with three and others with but one example, is not apparent; nor why ultramarine should be several steps above turquoise, for the reverse is generally true. Besides which the hue of turquoise is greenish, while that of ultramarine is purplish, but the list cannot show this; and the remarkable statement that one kind of blue is “hellish,” while another is “celestial,” should rest upon an experience that few can claim. Failing to define color-value and color-hue, the list gives no hint of color-strength, except at C and D, where one kind of blue is “dying” when the next is “being born,” which not inaptly describes the color memory of many a person. Finally, it assures us that Queen blue is “fine” and King blue is “deep.”
This year the fashionable shades are “burnt onion” and “fresh spinach.” The florists talk of a “pink violet” and a “green pink.” A maker of inks describes the red as a “true crimson scarlet,” which is a contradiction in terms. These and a host of other names borrowed from the most heterogeneous sources, become outlawed as soon as the simple color terms and measures of this system are adopted.
Color anarchy is replaced by systematic color description.
[27.] Patented Jan. 9, 1900.