Crimson

From Vero - Wikipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Other uses Template:Infobox color Crimson is a rich, deep red color, inclining to purple.<ref> Template:Oed </ref>Template:Better source needed It originally meant the color of the kermes dye produced from a scale insect, Kermes vermilio, but the name is now sometimes also used as a generic term for slightly bluish-red colors that are between red and rose. It is the national color of Nepal.

History

Crimson (NR4) is produced using the dried bodies of a scale insect, Kermes, which were gathered commercially in Mediterranean countries, where they live on the kermes oak, and sold throughout Europe.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Kermes dyes have been found in burial wrappings in Anglo-Scandinavian York. They fell out of use with the introduction of carmine, also made from scale insects, because although the dyes were comparable in quality and color intensity, ten to twelve times as much kermes is needed to produce the same effect as carmine.

Carmine is a slightly different shade of red, extracted from a different insect (female cochineal), although these denominations are sometimes confused or exchanged on purpose. Cochineal appears to have been brought to Europe by the Spaniard Hernán Cortés during the conquest of the Aztec Empire and the name 'carmine' is derived from the French carmin. It was first described by Pietro Andrea Mattioli in 1549. The pigment is also called cochineal after the insect from which it is made.

Alizarin crimson was invented in 1868.Template:Sfn Alizarin (PR83) is a pigment that was first synthesized in 1868 by the German chemists Carl Gräbe and Carl Liebermann and replaced the natural pigment madder lake. Alizarin crimson is a dye bonded onto alum which is then used as a pigment and mixed with ochre, sienna and umber. It is not totally colorfast.

Several historical color models have described crimson as a basic color:

Etymology

Crimson is a type of red.Template:Sfn English dictionaries define crimson as a deep red, a rich red, or a purplish red.Template:Sfn The word crimson refers to the kermes insect used to create the kermes dye. It comes from the Arabic word for the kermes insect, which was adapted to Medieval Latin and then Middle English, where it referred to both the insect and the dye Template:Circa.Template:Sfn

Earlier forms include cremesin, crymysyn and cramoysin (cf. cramoisy, a crimson cloth). These were adapted via Old Spanish from the Medieval Latin Template:Lang (also Template:Lang or Template:Lang), the dye produced from Kermes scale insects, and can be traced back to Arabic Template:Lang (Template:Lang) ("red") Template:IPA (Template:Pronunciation), also borrowed in Turkic languages Template:Lang and many other languages, e.g. German Template:Lang, Italian Template:Lang, French Template:Lang, Portuguese Template:Lang, Dutch Template:Lang, etc. (via Latin). The ultimate source from Classical Persian کرمست (kirmist), from Middle Persian; see Proto-Indo-Iranian *kŕ̥miš. Cognate with Sanskrit कृमिज (kṛmija). Doublet of kermes; also see carmine.<ref>"American Heritage Dictionary", s.v. Kermes; also Kluge, "Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache", s.v. Karmesin, et al.</ref>

A shortened form of Template:Lang also gave the Latin Template:Lang, from which comes carmine.

Other cognates include the Persian Template:Lang "red" derived from "kermest" the red worm,<ref>Dehkhoda Dictionary https://www.vajehyab.com/dehkhoda/قرمز Template:Webarchive</ref> Old Church Slavonic Template:Lang (Template:Lang), archaic Russian Template:Lang (Template:Lang), Bulgarian Template:Lang (Template:Lang), and Serbo-Croatian Template:Lang "red". Cf. also vermilion.

Connotations

Crimson is sometimes used to describe the color of blood.Template:Sfn Crimson sometimes described the color of blushing, though brighter reds such as scarlet may also be used in this context.Template:Sfn

In descriptive writing, crimson is sometimes used to emphasize the color red in a more intense usage and invoke a stronger emotional connotation.Template:Sfn The color can be used negatively to describe anger or malice. It may alternatively be associated with style or class, especially in the context of fashion or interior design.Template:Sfn

Dyes

Template:Main article

Carminic acid

Carmine dyes, which give crimson and related red and purple colors, are based on an aluminium and calcium salt of carminic acid. Carmine lake is an aluminium or aluminium-tin lake of cochineal extract, and crimson lake is prepared by striking down an infusion of cochineal with a 5 percent solution of alum and cream of tartar. Purple lake is prepared like carmine lake with the addition of lime to produce the deep purple tone. Carmine dyes tend to fade quickly.

Carmine dyes were once widely prized in both the Americas and in Europe. They were used in paints by Michelangelo and for the crimson fabrics of the Hussars, the Turks, the British Redcoats, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

Nowadays carmine dyes are used for coloring foodstuffs, medicines and cosmetics. As a food additive in the European Union, carmine dyes are designated E120, and are also called cochineal and Natural Red 4. Carmine dyes are also used in some oil paints and watercolors used by artists.

In nature

Crimson rosella
Crimson rosella

In culture

Literature

Music

Film

  • In Guillermo del Toro's 2015 gothic romance film Crimson Peak, the Sharpes' dilapidated mansion Allerdale Hall, which is steadily sinking into the red clay, is referred to as "Crimson Peak" due to the warm red clay seeping through the snow.
  • The 1952 film The Crimson Pirate starred Burt Lancaster and Nick Cravat. Set late in the 18th century, on the fictional Caribbean islands of San Pero and Cobra, where a rebellion on Cobra is underway by the mysterious "El Libre". Pirate Captain Vallo captures the King's ship carrying His Majesty's envoy.

Nobility

  • In Polish, karmazyn (crimson) is a synonym for a magnate, i.e., a member of the rich, high nobility as only they may wear robing dyed from the scale insect.

Religion

Food

Military

School colors

Template:Infobox color

Vexillology

See also

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

   |{{#ifeq: Crimson |
                |{{#ifeq: |
                             |Public Domain 
                             |Wikisource 
                           }}
                |Wikisource 
               }}
  }}{{#ifeq:  |
   |{{#ifeq:  |
                                    |This article
                                    |One or more of the preceding sentences
                                   }} incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: 
  }}{{#invoke:template wrapper|{{#if:|list|wrap}}|_template=cite EB1911
   |_exclude=footnote, inline, noicon, no-icon, noprescript, no-prescript, _debug
   | noicon=1
  }}{{#ifeq:  ||}}

Template:Wiktionary Template:Commons category

Template:Shades of red Template:Shades of magenta Template:Color topics