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Kamis, 21 Juni 2018

Cyan Paint Color Names (various shade/tone/tint) - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com

This article is about tints and shades of cyan, turquoise color. Cyan is one of the primary colors of subktif-cyan, magenta, and yellow.

The first recorded use of cyan blue ("cyan blue" was the name used for the "cyan" color of the 19th century) as the color name in English in 1879.


Video Shades of cyan



Cyan dalam pencetakan dan warna web cyan dan aqua

Proses cyan

In color printing, the color of cyan called cyan process or cyan pigment is one of the three main pigment colors which, together with yellow and magenta, are the three primary colors of subtractive pigment. (The secondary colors of the pigments are blue, green, and red.) Thus, the CMYK printing process was invented in the 1890s, when newspapers began publishing color comic strips.

The cyan process is not RGB color, and there is no fixed conversion from primary CMYK to RGB. Different formulations are used for printer ink, so there can be variations in printed colors ie pure cyan ink. The typical formulation cyan process is shown in the color box on the right. The color source shown on the right is the magenta color shown in the diagram located at the bottom of the following website offering the tintbook for CMYK printing: [1].

Web color cyan (aqua)

The web color cyan , shown on the right, is one of three secondary colors in the RGB color model, which is used to create all colors on a computer or television screen by mixing different combinations of red, green and blue light. The X11 name for this color is cyan; the HTML name for the same color is aqua. Both consist of a mixture of the same blue and green light, and the color is exactly the same.

Maps Shades of cyan



Additional variations of cyan

Aero blue

Aero blue is cyan color fluorescence. Aero blue is used as a rainshower in one of Sharpie's permanent marker (marker) but not so bright on its marker.

However, there is no mechanism to show fluorescence on a computer screen.

Aquamarine

Aquamarine is a blue bluish color that is blue to cyan. It is named after aquamarine minerals, gemstones mainly found in granite boulders. The first recorded use of aquamarine as the color name in English was in 1598.

Blue-green

Blue-green has been the color of Crayola since 1930.

Caribbean Flow

Displayed on the right is a Caribbean Flow color.

Celeste

On the right is displayed celeste .

Bleu celeste ("blue sky") is a rare tincture in the emblem (not one of seven primary colors or metals or three "staynard colors"). This tincture is sometimes also called ciel or just celeste . It is depicted in lighter shades of the various shades of the more traditional blue tureure, which is the standard blue color used in the emblem. It has been rarely used since the 17th century, gaining popularity after the First World War.

Cerulean

The first recorded use of cerulean as the color name in English was in 1590.

This word may be derived from the Latin word , "dark blue, blue, or blue-green", which in turn may come from caelulum , small from caelum , "heaven, heaven".

Charleston green

Charleston green is a very dark cyan color. The color of green Charleston originated after the American Civil War, around 1865, when during reconstruction, it was widely used to paint homes in Charleston, South Carolina.

Dark cyan

On the right is displayed web color dark cyan .

Blue electricity

Electric Blue is a color approaching cyan which is a representation of the color of lightning, electric spark, and argon sign; this is named after the ionized ionized light generated during electrical discharges.

The first recorded use of electric blue as the color name in English was in 1884.

Green-blue

Green-blue has been the color of Crayola since 1958. It continued as Crayola's crayon color until 1990.

Keppel

On the right is displayed keppel color.

The color name keppel has been used since 2001, when it was enacted as one of the colors on the Xona.com Color List.

Light cyan

On the right is displayed web color light cyan .

Green bright sea

On the right is displayed green sea web color.

Midnight green

Midnight green (sometimes called Green eagle ) has been the primary color of the Philadelphia Eagles official from the National Football League since 1996.

Robin egg blue

The blue robin egg color is displayed on the right.

The first recorded use of the color of robin egg blue as the color name in English was in 1873.

Blue Sky (Crayola)

Shown to the right is a sky-blue color . This is the color called the blue sky in the Crayola crayon. This color was formulated by Crayola in 1958. The "blue sky" appears in 32, 48, 64, 96 and 120 packs of crayons.

Teal

On the right is displayed web color teal .

The first recorded use of teal as the color name in English was in 1917.

Tiffany Blue

Tiffany Blue is the everyday name for light egg robin egg blue that is associated with Tiffany & amp; Co., a New York City jewelry company. The color was used on the cover of Tiffany's Blue Book, first published in 1845. Since then Tiffany & amp; Co. has been using color extensively on promotional materials, including boxes and bags. Tiffany Blue color is protected as a trademark of color by Tiffany & amp; Co. in some jurisdictions including the US.

Turquoise

On the right is displayed an X11 color named turquoise .

Turquoise is a greenish-green name, based on gems with the same name. The word turquoise is from French for Turkish, because the gem was originally imported from Turkey.

The first recorded use of turquoise as the color name in English was in 1573. Perhaps because it shares its name with minerals, turquoise is now a more common term in English than any other color similar to cyan.

Verdigris

Verdigris is a common name for green pigments obtained through the application of acetic acid to a natural copper or patina plate formed when copper, brass or bronze is bypassed and exposed to air or seawater over a period of time.. The name verdigris comes from the Middle English vertegrez , from the Old French verte grez , changes from vert-de-GrÃÆ'¨ ce ("green from Greece"). Used as a pigment in paintings and other art objects (as green) since ancient Greece, was originally made by hanging copper plates over hot vinegar in a sealed pot until a green crust formed on copper. The green color of copper (II) acetate makes this form of verdigris widely used pigment. Until the 19th century, verdigris was the most vibrant green pigment available and often used in painting. Verdigris is sometimes used to illustrate cyan colors in the initial color wheel.

Viridian

Viridian is the blue-green pigment, hydrated chromium (III) oxide, medium saturation and relatively dark value. It is made more green than blue. In particular, it is a dark green spring color, the color between green and cyan on the color wheel, or, in paint, a tertiary blue-green color. Viridian takes its name from the Latin viridis , which means "green".

The first recorded use of viridian as the color name in English was in the 1860s (a definite uncertain year).

Shades & Tints Of Cyan
src: warrenmars.com


Cyan in human culture

See Cyan in human culture in the main article about Cyan.


Wrapping spectrum into color wheel

If the visible spectrum is wrapped to form a color wheel, cyan (primary subtractive) appears between blue and green:


See also

  • List of colors
  • Distinguishes blue from green in
  • language
  • Magenta Variations
  • Yellow variation



References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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