Brown

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The brown and orange disks of color are objectively identical, in identical gray surrounds, in this image; their perceived color categories depend on what white they are compared to.

Brown, when used as a general term, is a color which is a dark yellow, orange, or red, of low luminance relative to lighter or white colored objects.[1]

Some pale orange and yellow colors of lower saturation are called light browns.

Contents

  • 1 Brown
  • 2 Brown in culture
  • 3 Brown pigments
  • 4 References
  • 5 See also
  • 6 External links

[edit] Brown

Brown
About these coordinates
About these coordinates
— Color coordinates —
Hex triplet #964B00
RGBB (r, g, b) (150, 75, 0)
HSV (h, s, v) (30°, 100%, 59%)
Source BF2S Color Guide
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte)

The color brown is displayed at right. Another name for this color (rarely used) is dark orange.

Brown paint can be produced by adding black or their complementary colors to rose, red, orange, or yellow colored paint. As a color of low intensity it is a tertiary color in the original technical sense: a mix of the three subtractive primary colors is brown if the cyan content is low. Brown exists as a color perception only in the presence of a brighter color contrast: yellow, orange, red, or rose objects are still perceived as such if the general illumination level is low, despite reflecting the same amount of red or orange light as a brown object would in normal lighting conditions.

The first recorded use of brown as a color name in English was in 1000.[2]

[edit] Brown in culture

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Nature

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[edit] Brown pigments