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Fuchsia (color)

Color

Fuchsia (color)

Summary

Color

FieldValue
titleFuchsia
hexFF00FF
sourceW3C CSS Color Module
imageFile:DoubleFuchsias wb.jpg
altFlowers of the fuchsia plant
captionFlowers of the fuchsia plant

Fuchsia (, ) is a vivid pinkish–red color, named after the color of the flower of the fuchsia plant, which was named by a French botanist, Charles Plumier, after the 16th-century German botanist Leonhart Fuchs.

The color fuchsia was introduced as the color of a new aniline dye called fuchsine, patented in 1859 by the French chemist François-Emmanuel Verguin. The fuchsine dye was renamed magenta later in the same year, to celebrate a victory of the French army at the Battle of Magenta on 4 June 1859 near the Italian city of that name.

The first recorded use of fuchsia as a color name in English was in 1892.

In print and design

In color printing and design, there are more variations between magenta and fuchsia. Fuchsia is usually a more pinkish–purplish color, whereas magenta is more reddish. Fuchsia flowers themselves contain a wide variety of purples. Fuchsia was a very popular aesthetic for fashion during the 2000s.

Fuchsine

The first synthetic dye of the color fuchsia, called fuchsine, was patented in 1859 by François-Emmanuel Verguin. It was later renamed magenta, and became highly popular under that name. File:Basic Fuchsine in aqueous solution.jpg|A sample of fuchsine dye in an aqueous solution File:Basic Fuchsine Crystals.JPG|Crystals of fuchsine dye and the color they produce

Fuchsia (web color)

On computer screens, red and blue light combined at full intensity produce fuchsia or magenta. The two web colors are identical, and have the same hex code, FF00FF.

In the system of additive colors, the RGB color model used to create all the colors on a computer or television display, the colors magenta and fuchsia are exactly the same, and have the same hex number, #FF00FF. The name fuchsia is used on the HTML web color list for this color, while the name magenta is used on the X11 web color list. They are both composed the same way, by combining an equal amount of blue and red light at full brightness, as shown in the image on the left.

Variations of fuchsia

French fuchsia

French fuchsia color shoes

At right is displayed the color French fuchsia, which is the tone of fuchsia called fuchsia in a color list popular in France.

Fuchsia rose

Fuchsia rose is the color that was chosen as the 2001 Pantone color of the year by Pantone.

Red–purple

Red–purple is the color that is called Rojo-Púrpura (the Spanish word for "red–purple") in the Guía de coloraciones (Guide to colorations) by Rosa Gallego and Juan Carlos Sanz, a color dictionary published in 2005 that is widely popular in the Hispanophone realm.

Although red-purple is a seldom-used color name in English, in Spanish it is regarded one of the major tones of purple.

Fuchsia purple

The color fuchsia purple is displayed at right.

The source of this color is the "Pantone Textile Paper eXtended (TPX)" color list, color #18-2436 TPX—Fuchsia Purple.

Deep fuchsia

Deep fuchsia is the color that is called fuchsia in the List of Crayola crayon colors.

Fandango

Displayed at right is the color fandango.

The first recorded use of fandango as a color name in English was in 1925.

Antique fuchsia

Displayed at right is the color antique fuchsia.

The first recorded use of antique fuchsia as a color name in English was in 1928.

The source of this color is the plochere color system, a color system formulated in 1948 that is widely used by interior designers.

Crayola color fuchsia

In 1949 the color names of Crayola crayons were reformed and became more scientific, more of the names of the colors of the crayons being based on the names of colors in the original 1930 edition of the Dictionary of Color and the color names of the Munsell color system. Crayola crayons set up a color naming system similar to that used in the Munsell color wheel, except that violet instead of purple was used as the secondary color on the color wheel between red and blue. The web color fuchsia is equivalent to the pure chroma on Munsell color wheel of the Munsell color system that is designated as "5RP" (reddish purple) i.e., a purple that is shaded toward red (the color we can achieve today with computers is a much more saturated pure color wheel chroma hue than the original color chip shown on the Munsell color wheel diagram in the Munsell color system article). In 1972, a new Crayola crayon color was introduced called hot magenta which is the closest equivalent to the web color fuchsia in Crayola crayons. (See List of Crayola crayon colors.)

The color shown in the color box above is the color "fuchsia" in A Dictionary of Color. That is why the name fuchsia was chosen as the equivalent to one of the three secondary additive primary colors, electric magenta, because A Dictionary of Color was the primary reference on color names (besides the Munsell Book of Color) before the introduction of personal computers. The color shown above is somewhat brighter than most actual flowers of the fuchsia plant. The color shown as magenta in A Dictionary of Color is a somewhat different color from the color shown in that book as fuchsia—it is the original color magenta now called rich magenta or magenta (dye) (see the article on magenta for a color box displaying a sample of this original magenta).

References

  • Philip Ball (2001), Bright Earth, Art and the Invention of Colour, Penguin Group, . (ISBN and page numbers are from the French translation).

Notes and citations

References

  1. (18 January 2022). "CSS Color Module Level 3".
  2. Oxford English dictionaries online: "a vivid pinkish–red colour like that of the sepals of a typical fuchsia flower". See also ''Shorter Oxford English Dictionary'' (2002), Oxford University Press, 5th Edition: "A shade of red like that of the fuchsia flower." See also ''Random House College Dictionary'' (1980), Revised Edition: "A Bright purplish–red color". See also Webster's New World Dictionary of the American Language: "a purplish-red."
  3. Philip Ball, ''Bright Earth, Art and the Invention of Colour'', p. 214.
  4. Maerz and Paul, ''A Dictionary of Color'' New York:1930 McGraw-Hill, p. 195; Color Sample of Fuchsia Page 123 Plate 50 Color Sample I 12
  5. Compare the colors Fuchsia and Magenta in the 1930 book ''A Dictionary of Color'' by Maerz and Paul
  6. Haramis, Nick. (14 February 2022). "Gaudy and Gleeful, Early 2000s Fashion Is Making a Comeback". The New York Times.
  7. (18 May 2018). "Paris Hilton Has Some Surprising Fashion Advice for Today's It Girls".
  8. (24 September 2020). "50 Christina Aguilera Fashion Moments You Forgot You Were Obsessed With".
  9. Ilchi, Layla. (15 December 2020). "All of Pantone's Color of the Year Predictions Since 2000".
  10. "What the Shift from Y2K to Millennial Pink (and Back Again) Means – Y2K Millennial Fashion".
  11. W. W. D. Staff. (20 August 2002). "Ungaro's Vision of Fuchsia".
  12. (18 January 2022). "CSS Color Module Level 3". w3.org.
  13. Bilik, Yan. "Couleur fuchsia : définition et codes couleur".
  14. [http://www.pantone.com/pages/pantone/colorfinder.aspx?c_id=3097 Pantone TPX]
  15. Gallego, Rosa; Sanz, Juan Carlos (2005). ''Guía de coloraciones'' (Gallego, Rosa; Sanz, Juan Carlos (2005). ''Guide to Colorations'') Madrid: H. Blume. {{ISBN. 84-89840-31-8
  16. Maerz and Paul ''A Dictionary of Color'' New York:1930 McGraw-Hill, p. 195; Color Sample of Fandango Page 127 Plate 52 Color Sample L 10
  17. [https://web.archive.org/web/20110813205222/http://colors.bravo9.com/nbs-iscc-p-plochere-color-system/list/all/ Plochere]
  18. Maerz and Paul, ''A Dictionary of Color'' New York:1930 McGraw-Hill, p. 189; Color Sample of Antique Fuchsia Page 109 Plate 43 Color Sample K7
  19. [http://colors.bravo9.com/nbs-iscc-p-plochere-color-system/list/all/ Plochere Color System:] {{webarchive. link. (21 August 2010)
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