I just enjoy books on color trivia and this is another one. Divided by color - Seeing Red; Yellow Fevers; Into the Blue; House of Orange; Purple Reign; Sea of Green; Pink is for Boys; Brown in Town; The Black Stuff; The Grey Area; and The Whiteness of Being.
So many tidbits of information -
Why 'aristocrats' are called blue-blooded - in the 9th century, Spanish Castilians would show their pale skinned arms and the blue veins before going into battle with the Moors and later it was to show contrast with field workers who were tanned.
Why various soccer teams wear the jerseys or kits that they do and how they've changed over the decades.
The only street light in the world that has green on top instead of red - it's in Syracuse, New York, in the Tipperary Hill neighborhood settled by Irish immigrants who repeatedly broke the lens, having refused to have British red dominate and be atop the Irish green.
At one point, about 85% of the Ferraris on the road were a variety of red - there is no specific color named "Ferrari red". Nor is there a specific color called "British Racing Green' although 'shamrock' comes close.
Khaki was first worn in India when the British military was looking for a uniform that would make men 'invisible in the land of dust'. So white cotton fabric was rubbed with mud, coffee, tea, and curry powder before tailored into tunics and trousers.
The little black dress, the man in black, the black Jolly Roger flag.
Han purple which was mixed into the material that made the terracotta army but once they were excavated, it mostly faded as has the recipe.
And hundreds more.
It's a fun book to read. And can easily be set aside to be picked up at a later time without worrying about losing the plot or your place.
2022-008