Rose
 
About these coordinates     Color coordinates
Hex triplet#FF0080
sRGBB (r, g, b)(255, 0, 128)
HSV (h, s, v)(330°, 100%, 100%)
CIELChuv (L, C, h)(55, 143, 355°)
SourceBy definition[1]
ISCC–NBS descriptorVivid purplish red
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte)
H: Normalized to [0–100] (hundred)

Rose is the color halfway between red and magenta on the HSV color wheel, also known as the RGB color wheel, on which it is at hue angle of 330 degrees.

Rose is one of the tertiary colors on the HSV (RGB) color wheel. The complementary color of rose is spring green. Sometimes rose is quoted instead as the web-safe color FF00CC, which is closer to magenta than to red, corresponding to a hue angle near 320 degrees, or the web-safe color FF0077, which is closer to red than magenta, corresponding to a hue angle of about 340 degrees.

Rose as a tertiary color on the RGB color wheel
  orange
  red
  rose
  violet

Shades of rose

Main article: Shades of rose

Etymology of rose

Pale rose-coloured hibiscus
Pale rose-coloured hibiscus

The first recorded use of rose as a color name in English was in 1382.[2]

The etymology of the color name rose is the same as that of the name of the rose flower. The name originates from Latin rosa, borrowed through Oscan from colonial Greek in southern Italy: rhodon (Aeolic form: wrodon), from Aramaic wurrdā, from Assyrian wurtinnu, from Old Iranian *warda (cf. Avestan warda, Sogdian ward, Parthian wâr).

In culture

Geography
Match me such marvel save in Eastern clime,
A rose-red city – half as old as time!
A rose-colored Litfaß column on the Rosenstrasse in Berlin today commemorates the Rosenstrasse protest (the building in which the detainees were held no longer exists).
Music
Occult
Politics
The Salon of Mercury is part of the Grand appartement du roi in the Versailles Palace and is decorated with rose colored wallpaper.
Religion

See also

References

  1. ^ On the RGB color wheel, derived from RGB color space, the color rose is defined as the tertiary color that is at a hue angle of 330 degrees.
  2. ^ Maerz and Paul A Dictionary of Color New York:1930 McGraw-Hill Page 203
  3. ^ Marrakech, Morocco—The rose City.
  4. ^ Leadbeater, C.W. The Chakras Wheaton, Illinois, U.S.A.:1926--Theosophical Publishing House Pages 54–58 Full text of the book "The Chakras" by C.W. Leadbeater with color illustrations: