Difference between revisions of "Green pigments"
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Examples of inorganic green pigments: | Examples of inorganic green pigments: | ||
− | - earth green ([ | + | - earth green ([[celadonite]], [[glauconite]], [[terre verte]]). |
− | - oxides ([ | + | - oxides ([[viridian]], [[chromic oxide]], [[chrome green]], [[cobalt green]]). |
− | - carbonates ([ | + | - carbonates ([malachite]], [[bice]]). |
− | - other ([ | + | - other ([[emerald green]], [[atacamite]], [[brochantite]]). |
Examples of organic green pigments: | Examples of organic green pigments: | ||
− | - plant ([ | + | - plant ([[sap green]], [[chlorophyll]]). |
− | - synthetic ([ | + | - synthetic ([[verdigris]], [[phthalocyanine]], [[Brilliant green]]). |
== Synonyms and Related Terms == | == Synonyms and Related Terms == |
Revision as of 11:35, 1 August 2013
Description
Green is a color produced by light having a spectrum dominated by energy with a wavelength of about 490–560 nm. It is considered a primary color in the RGB additive color model, but is a secondary color in the traditional RYB color wheel made by mixing blue and yellow. An average green color is represented by the following color coordinates:
- Hex triplet: #008000 (HTML/CSS)
- RGB: (0, 128~255, 0); CMYK (0, 0, 0, 100)
- HSV: (120°, 100%, 50~100%)
Examples of inorganic green pigments:
- earth green (Celadonite, Glauconite, Terre verte).
- oxides (Viridian, Chromic oxide, Chrome green, Cobalt green).
- carbonates ([malachite]], Bice).
- other (Emerald green, Atacamite, Brochantite).
Examples of organic green pigments:
- plant (Sap green, Chlorophyll).
- synthetic (Verdigris, Phthalocyanine, Brilliant green).
Synonyms and Related Terms
grøn (Dan.); Grün (Deut.); verde (Esp., It., Port.); pigments verts (Fr.); viridus (Lat.); groen (Ned.); grön (Sven.); pigmentos verdes (Port.)