The orange colour of carrots, pumpkins,
sweet potatoes, oranges, and many other fruits and vegetables comes from
carotenes, a type of photosynthetic pigment. These pigments convert the light
energy that the plants absorb from the sun into chemical energy for the plants'
growth. Similarly the hues of autumn leaves are from the same pigment after
chlorophyll is removed.
In Europe and America, surveys show that
orange is the colour most associated with amusement, the unconventional,
extroverts, warmth, fire, energy, activity, danger, taste and aroma,
Protestantism, the autumn and Allhallowtide seasons, as well as having long
been the national colour of the Netherlands and the House of Orange. It also
serves as the political colour of Christian democracy political ideology and
most Christian democratic political parties. In Asia
it is an important symbolic colour of Buddhism and Hinduism.
Etymology
The colour orange is named after the
appearance of the ripe orange fruit. The word comes from the Old French orange,
from the old term for the fruit, pomme d'orange. The French word, in turn,
comes from the Italian arancia, based on Arabic nāranj, derived from the
Sanskrit naranga. The first recorded use of orange as a colour name in English
was in 1512, in a will now filed with the Public Record Office.
Prior to this word being introduced to the
English-speaking world, saffron already existed in the English language. Crog
also referred to the saffron colour, so that orange was also referred to as
ġeolurēad (yellow-red) for reddish orange, or ġeolucrog (yellow-saffron) for
yellowish orange. Alternatively, orange things were sometimes described as red
such as red deer, red hair, the Red Planet and robin redbreast.
Science
Optics
In optics, orange is the colour seen by the
eye when looking at light with a wavelength between approximately 585–620 nm.
It has a hue of 30° in HSV colour space.
In the traditional colour wheel used by
painters, orange is the range of colours between red and yellow, and painters
can obtain orange simply by mixing red and yellow in various proportions;
however these colours are never as vivid as a pure orange pigment. In the RGB
colour model (the system used to create colours on a television or computer
screen), orange is generated by combining high intensity red light with a lower
intensity green light, with the blue light turned off entirely. Orange is a tertiary
colour which is numerically halfway between gamma-compressed red and yellow, as
can be seen in the RGB colour wheel.
Regarding painting, blue is the
complementary colour to orange. As many painters of the 19th century
discovered, blue and orange reinforce each other. The painter Vincent van Gogh
wrote to his brother Theo that in his paintings, he was trying to reveal
"the oppositions of blue with orange, of red with green, of yellow with
violet ... trying to make the colours intense and not a harmony of grey".
In another letter he wrote simply, "there is no orange without blue."
Van Gogh, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and many other impressionist and
post-impressionist painters frequently placed orange against azure or cobalt
blue, to make both colours appear brighter.
The actual complement of orange is azure –
a colour that is one quarter of the way between blue and green on the colour
spectrum. The actual complementary colour of true blue is yellow. Orange
pigments are largely in the ochre or cadmium families, and absorb mostly
greenish-blue light.
Pigments and dyes
Minium and massicot are bright yellow and
orange pigments made since ancient times by heating lead oxide and its
variants. Minium was used in the Byzantine Empire
for making the red-orange colour on illuminated manuscripts, while massicot was
used by ancient Egyptian scribes and in the Middle Ages. Both were toxic, and
were replaced in the beginning of the 20th century by chrome orange and cadmium
orange.
Cadmium orange is a synthetic pigment made
cadmium sulfide. It is a by-product of mining for zinc, but also occurs rarely
in nature in the mineral greenockite. It is usually made by replacing some of
the sulphur with selenium, which results in an expensive but deep and lasting
colour. Selenium was discovered in 1817, but the pigment was not made
commercially until 1910.
Quinacridone orange is a synthetic organic
pigment first identified in 1896 and manufactured in 1935. It makes a vivid and
solid orange.
Diketo-pyrrolo pyrolle orange or DPP orange
is a synthetic organic pigment first commercialised in 1986. It is sold under
various commercial names, such as translucent orange. It makes an extremely
bright and lasting orange, and is widely used to colour plastics and fibres, as
well as in paints.
Why carrots, pumpkins, oranges and autumn
leaves are orange
The orange colour of carrots, pumpkins,
sweet potatoes, oranges, and many other fruits and vegetables comes from
carotenes, a type of photosynthetic pigment. These pigments convert the light
energy that the plants absorb from the sun into chemical energy for the plants'
growth. The carotenes themselves take their name from the carrot. Autumn leaves
also get their orange colour from carotenes. When the weather turns cold and
production of green chlorophyll stops, the orange colour remains.
Before the 18th century, carrots from Asia
were usually purple, while those in Europe
were either white or red. Dutch farmers bred a variety that was orange;
according to some sources, as a tribute to the stadtholder of Holland
and Zeeland , William of Orange. The long
orange Dutch carrot, first described in 1721, is the ancestor of the orange
horn carrot, one of the most common types found in supermarkets today. It takes
its name from the town of Hoorn , in the Netherlands .
Flowers
Foods
Food colourings
People associate certain colours with
certain flavours, and the colour of food can influence the perceived flavour in
anything from candy to wine. Since orange is popularly associated with good
flavour, many companies add orange food colouring to improve the appearance of
their packaged foods. Orange pigments and dyes, synthetic or natural, are added
to many orange sodas and juices, cheeses (particularly cheddar cheese,
Gloucester cheese, and American cheese); snack foods, butter and margarine;
breakfast cereals, ice cream, yoghurt, jam and candy. It is also often added to
children's medicine, and to chicken feed to make the egg yolks more orange.
The United States Government and the
European Union certify a small number of synthetic chemical colourings to be
used in food. These are usually aromatic hydrocarbons, or azo dyes, made from
petroleum. The most common ones are:
Allura red AC (also known as E129, its
official name in Europe ).
Sunset Yellow FCF, Yellow 6, and Red 40,
known as E110 in Europe , are dyes made from
aromatic hydrocarbons from petroleum.
Tartrazine, also known as Yellow 5 and E102
in Europe . A dye used in soft drinks such as
Mountain Dew, Kool-Aid, chewing gum, popcorn, breakfast cereals, cosmetics,
shampoos, eyeshadow, blush, and lipstsick.
Orange B is an azo dye approved by the US
Food and Drug Administration, but only for hot dog and sausage casings.
Citrus Red 2 is certified only to colour
orange peels.
Because many consumers are worried about
possible health consequences of synthetic dyes, some companies are beginning to
use natural food colours. Since these food colours are natural, they do not require
any certification from the Food and Drug Administration. The most popular
natural food colours are:
Annatto, made from the seeds of the achiote
tree. Annato contains carotenoids, the same ingredient that gives carrots and
other vegetables their orange colour. Annato has been used to dye certain
cheeses in Britain ,
particularly Gloucester
cheese, since the 16th century. It is now commonly used to colour American
cheese, snack foods, breakfast cereal, butter, and margarine. It is used as a
body paint by native populations in Central and South
America . In India ,
women often put it, under the name sindoor, on their hairline to indicate that
they are married.
Turmeric is a common spice in South Asia, Persia and the Mideast .
It contains the pigments called curcuminoids, widely used as a dye for the
robes of Buddhist monks. It is also often used in curry powders and to give
flavour to mustard. It is now being used more frequently in Europe and the US to give an
orange colour to canned beverages, ice cream, yogurt, popcorn and breakfast
cereal. The food colour is usually listed as E100.
Paprika oleoresin contains natural
carotenoids, and is made from chili peppers. It is used to colour cheese,
orange juice, spice mixtures and packaged sauces. It is also fed to chickens to
make their egg yolks more orange.
Source From Wikipedia
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