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  2. Shades of purple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shades_of_purple

    The pansy flower has varieties that exhibit three different colors: pansy (a color between indigo and violet), pansy pink, and pansy purple. The first recorded use of pansy purple as a color name in English was in 1814.

  3. List of colors by shade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_colors_by_shade

    Tones of violet tending towards the blue are called indigo. Purple colors are colors that are various blends of violet or blue light with red light.

  4. Color blindness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_blindness

    Some denotative tasks can be converted to comparative tasks by depicting the actual color whenever the color name is mentioned; for example, colored typography in "purple", purple or "purple ( )". For denotative tasks (color naming), using the most common shades of colors.

  5. Pride flag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pride_flag

    Each stripe color represents different types of non-binary identities: yellow for people who identify outside of the gender binary, white for non-binary people with multiple genders, purple for those with a mixture of both male and female genders, and black for agender individuals.

  6. The 19 Best Colors to Pair with Purple, According to Designers

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/15-best-colors-pair-purple...

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  7. Purple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purple

    HTML color names. B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte) H: Normalized to [0–100] (hundred) Purple is a color similar in appearance to violet light. In the RYB color model historically used in the arts, purple is a secondary color created by combining red and blue pigments.

  8. Mauve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauve

    Mauve (/ ˈ m oʊ v / ⓘ, mohv; / ˈ m ɔː v / ⓘ, mawv) is a pale purple color named after the mallow flower (French: mauve). The first use of the word mauve as a color was in 1796–98 according to the Oxford English Dictionary, but its use seems to have been rare before 1859.

  9. Lavender (color) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavender_(color)

    The color lavender might be described as a medium purple, a pale bluish purple, or a light pinkish-purple. The term lavender may be used in general to apply to a wide range of pale, light, or grayish-purples, but only on the blue side; lilac is pale purple on the pink side.

  10. Purpure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purpure

    In heraldry, purpure (/ ˈ p ɜːr p j ʊər /) is a tincture, equivalent to the colour purple, and is one of the five main or most usually used colours (as opposed to metals).

  11. Color terminology for race - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_terminology_for_race

    The color adjectives used in 1779 are weiss "white" (Caucasian race), gelbbraun "yellow-brown" (Mongolian race), schwarz "black" (Aethiopian race), kupferrot "copper-red" (American race) and schwarzbraun "black-brown" (Malayan race).