AMBER (COLOR)

Amber pendants


Contents
Amber
UNECE Amber
Formal definition of UNECE Amber
Shades of amber color comparison chart
Amber in human culture
References
External links

Amber


'Amber' is an orange-yellow color that got its name from the material known as amber. Due to this, amber can refer not to one but to a series of shades of orange (shown below in the ''shades of amber color comparison chart''), since the natural material varies from nearly yellow when newer to orange or reddish-orange when older.
Amber as shown in the color box at right is a pure chroma color on the color wheel halfway between orange and yellow. It is a color that is 75% yellow and 25% red.
The first recorded use of ''amber'' as a color name in English was in 1500. [1]

UNECE Amber


In automotive lighting, UNECE Regulations state that direction-indicator lamps and standalone side-marker lamps and reflectors on vehicles must be amber. The color is defined in terms of the CIE chromaticity diagram as shown below.

Formal definition of UNECE Amber


Limit towards green y le x - 0.120
Limit towards red y ge 0.390
Limit towards white y ge 0.790 - 0.670 x

The entirety of this definition lies outside the gamut of the sRGB color space — such a pure color cannot be represented using RGB primaries. The color swatch to the right is a desaturated approximation, created by taking the centroid of the standard definition and moving it towards the D65 white point, until it meets the sRGB gamut triangle.

Shades of amber color comparison chart


The purpose of the color comparison chart is, by arranging the shades of a particular color in approximate order from lightest at the top to most saturated in the middle to darkest at the bottom, to allow the Wikipedia user to more easily choose a color they may need for a particular use. Having the colors arranged by shade rather than alphabetically makes it easier to do this.

  • Tangerine Yellow (Hex: #FFCC00) (RGB: 255, 204, 0)

  • Saffron (Hex: #F4C430) (RGB: 244, 196, 48)

  • Golden Poppy (Hex: #FCC200) (RGB: 252, 194, 0)

  • AMBER (Hex: #FFBF00) (RGB: 255, 191, 0)

  • Selective Yellow (Hex: #FFBA00) (RGB: 255, 186, 0)

  • Macaroni and Cheese (Crayola) (Hex: #FFB79B) (RGB: 255, 185, 123)

  • Sandy Brown (web color) (Hex: #F4A460) (RGB: 244, 164, 96)

  • Atomic Tangerine (Crayola) (Hex: #FF9966) (RGB: 255, 153, 102)

  • Gamboge (Hex: #EF9B0F) (RGB: 239, 155, 15)

  • UNECE Amber (Hex: #FF7E00) (RGB: 255, 126, 0)


Amber in human culture


'Computers'

VT220 computer terminals were available with amber colored characters on their CRTs.
'Interior Design'

★ The original Amber Room (Russian ''Янтарная комната'', ) in the Catherine Palace of Tsarskoye Selo near Saint Petersburg was a complete chamber decoration of amber panels backed with gold leaf and mirrors. Due to its singular beauty, it was sometimes dubbed the ''Eighth Wonder of the World''.
'Religion'

★ The color amber is associated with Zoroastrianism because of its practice of fire worship in fire temples (actually, the holy fire is simply a representation of the energy of God [ Ahura Mazda ] ).
'Sports'

★ Amber is a color worn by Hull City AFC, an English football team. This is to represent their club nickname of 'The Tigers' and in many kits is used with black.
'Symbolism'

★ Amber is a symbolic color representing energy.
'Transportation Planning'

★ Amber is used in traffic lights and turn signals.

References


1. Maerz and Paul ''A Dictionary of Color'' New York:1930--McGraw Hill Page 189; Color Sample of Amber: Page 43 Plate 10 Color Sample J3

External links



UNECE Regulation No. 6: Uniform Provisions Concerning the Approval of Direction Indicators for Motor Vehicles and their Trailers (E/ECE/324-E/ECE/TRANS/505/Rev.1/Add.5/Rev.3/Amend.2)[1][2]

UNECE Regulation No. 48: Uniform Provisions Concerning the Approval of Vehicles with Regard to the Installation of Lighting and Light-Signalling Devices (E/ECE/324-E/ECE/TRANS/505/Rev.1/Add.47/Rev.3/Amend.2)

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