Nomes de cores

Um nome de cor é uma palavra ou frase que se refere a uma cor específica. Esta secção inclui mais de 1.000 nomes de cores mencionados em artigos da Wikipédia.

O preto é a cor mais escura, sendo o resultado da mistura de todas as cores (teoria de cores) ou bem, o resultado da falta parcial ou completa da luz. É o oposto exato do branco (ausencia de côr por refletir a mistura do espectro luz visível), absorvendo todas as cores de luz e por tanto acumulando mais energia (teoria física da luz), por esta razão os materiais pretos são mais quentes). Como o branco e o cinza, é uma cor acromática, literalmente, uma cor sem cor ou matiz. É uma das quatro cores primárias do modelo de cores CMYK, juntamente com o ciano, amarelo e o magenta, utilizado na impressão de cores para produzir as demais cores.
Preto
#000000
Cadmium yellow is a pigment used in painting, made from cadmium sulfide. It has been used for centuries by artists due to its bright and durable properties. The color shown here with hex code #FFF600 resembles this cadmium yellow pigment.
Amarelo cádmio
#FFF600
Lemon yellow was a Crayola color from 1949 to 1990.
Amarelo limão
#FFF44F
Mostarda é uma cor amarelo dourado que lembra a cor de mostarda. Ao misturar amarelo, vermelho e azul a cor Mostarda pode ser produzida.
Mostarda
#FFDB58
In Western culture, pastel pink is used to symbolize baby girls just as baby blue is often used to symbolize baby boys.
Rosa pastel
#FFD1DC
Mikado yellow is a shade of yellow that appears in the national flags of Colombia and Kazakhstan. It was also formerly used for Lincoln automobiles and is associated with various dyes and colorings.
Amarelo Mikado
#FFC40C
O Milho de cor refere-se a um tom de amarelo. É nomeado após o cereal com o mesmo nome - milho. Na utilização pública, uma cor de milho pode ser atribuída a uma grande variedade de cores, que varia de amarelo claro para um tom escuro que faz fronteira com a laranja, como a cor de milho pode variar.
Milho
#FBEC5D
Carnelian (or Cornell red) is a color named after the carnelian variety of the mineral chalcedony. This semi-precious gemstone is noted for its rich shade of reddish-brown. The first recorded use of Carnelian as a color name in English was in 1899. Cornell's color is referred to as Cornelian (an alternate spelling of the mineral carnelian) in the World Almanac of 1892 and the Living Church Annual and Whittaker's Churchman's Almanac of 1896.
Cornalina
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A tinta vermelha de Falu (em sueco: Falu rödfärg ou Faluröd) é uma tinta feita com pigmento vermelho, recuperado na Mina de cobre de Falun, da província histórica da Dalecárlia, na Suécia. Devido às suas propriedades conservadoras da madeira, muitas casas tradicionais suecas são pintadas com esta tinta. É feita a partir do aquecimento de óxidos de ferro juntamente com farinha de centeio ou de trigo e sulfato de ferro.
Vermelho Falu
#801818
Fawn is a light yellowish tan colour. It is usually used in reference to clothing, soft furnishings and bedding, as well as to a dog's coat colour. It occurs in varying shades, ranging between pale tan to pale fawn to dark deer-red. The first recorded use of fawn as a colour name in English was in 1789.
Castanho-escuro
#e5aa70
Seal brown is a rich dark brown color, resembling the color of the dyed fur from the fur seal.
Castanho-selo
#59260B
Fulvous is a colour, sometimes described as dull orange, brownish-yellow or tawny; it can also be likened to a variation of buff, beige or butterscotch. As an adjective it is used in the names of many species of birds, and occasionally other animals, to describe their appearance. It is also used as in mycology to describe fungi with greater colour specificity, specifically the pigmentation of the surface cuticle, the broken flesh and the spores en masse. The first recorded use of fulvous as a colour name in English was in the year 1664. Fulvous in English is derived from the Latin "fulvus", a term that can be recognised in the scientific binomials of several species, and can provide a clue to their colouration.
Fulvo
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IKB (International Klein Blue), recentemente conhecida como Azul Klein é a designação da tonalidade de azul que Yves Klein obtinha com a mistura de uma determinada quantidade de pigmentos. A fórmula registada a 19 de Maio de 1960, no Instituto Nacional da Propriedade Industrial, com o número 63471, protege a composição química do azul IKB.
Azul Klein internacional
#002FA7
The official colors of the university and used by the athletic teams are UNH Blue and white. UNH Blue is a dark blue matching Pantone color 287. New Hampshire is known as the "Granite State." White resembles the White Mountains of New Hampshire, located an hour north of Durham. The University of New Hampshire campus is located about a mile from the Great Bay estuary, which runs out to the Atlantic Ocean. Blue resembles the Atlantic Ocean. New Hampshire Colors written by E Y Blewett '26
Azul UNH
#001D52
Mummy brown, also known as Egyptian brown or Caput Mortuum, was a rich brown bituminous pigment with good transparency, sitting between burnt umber and raw umber in tint. The pigment was made from the flesh of mummies mixed with white pitch and myrrh. Mummy brown was extremely popular from the mid-eighteenth to the nineteenth centuries. However, fresh supplies of mummies diminished, and artists were less satisfied with the pigment's permanency and finish. By 1915, demand had significantly declined. Suppliers ceased to offer it by the middle of the twentieth century. Mummy brown was one of the favourite colours of the Pre-Raphaelites. It was used by many artists, including Eugene Delacroix, William Beechey, Edward Burne-Jones, Lawrence Alma-Tadema, and Martin Drolling.
Castanho múmia
#7d4e25
Smoky black or black carrying cream is a coat color of horses which has the same phenotype as black. Smoky black is produced by the action of a heterozygous (single copy) cream gene on an underlying black coat color. Therefore, smoky black is a member of the cream family of coat color dilutions, and found in horse populations that have other cream-based colors such as palomino, buckskin, perlino, cremello and smoky cream. All smoky blacks must have at least one parent with the cream gene, and a smoky black can only be verified through DNA testing or parentage. Smoky black has been mistaken for faded black, dark bay or brown, grullo or even liver chestnut.
Preto fumado
#100C08
Azul egípcio, também conhecido como silicato de cobre e cálcio (CaCuSi4O10 ou CaO·CuO·4SiO2) é um pigmento usado pelos egípcios por milhares de anos. É considerado como o primeiro pigmento sintético. O pigmento foi conhecido pelos romanos com o nome de cerúleo (caeruleum). Vitrúvio descreveu em seu trabalho "De architectura" que ele foi produzido pela moagem de areia, cobre e natrão que foram misturados e aquecidos, moldados em pequenas bolas, em fornalhas. A cal é necessária para a produção, mas provavelmente utilizou-se areia rica em cal ao invés de cal pura. Após a era romana, o azul egípcio deixou de ser usado e o modo de fabricação foi esquecido.
Azul egípcio
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Dark purple is a dark tone of purple.
Roxo escuro
#301934
Tufts Blue is the tone of azure blue used in association with Tufts University. Tufts University Relations defines "Tufts Blue" as corresponding to the Pantone color of 279 or the process color of 70c 30m 0y 0k.
Azul Tufos
#3E8EDE
The color dark lava is the color of lava that has cooled and begun to congeal into igneous rock. The normalized color coordinates for dark lava are identical to taupe, which came into use as a color name in English in the early 19th century;
Lava escura
#483C32
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