The first-ever visual expansion of Werner’s Nomenclature of Colours, featuring over 800 illustration references from the natural world.
First published in 1814 and expanded in 1821 - long before the era of colour photography or print - Syme's edition of Werner's Nomenclature of Colours attempted to establish a universal colour reference system to help identify, classify and represent species from the natural world. Werner's set of 54 colour standards was enhanced by Patrick Syme with the addition of colour swatches and further references from nature, taking the total number of hues classified to 110. The resulting resource proved invaluable not only to artists but also to zoologists, botanists, mineralogists and anatomists. In Nature's Palette this technicolour trove has, for the first time, been enhanced with the addition of illustrations of the animals, vegetables and minerals Werner referenced alongside each colour swatch and accompanied by expert text explaining the uses and development of colour standards in relation to zoology, botany, minerology and anatomy. This fully realized colour catalogue includes elegant contemporary illustrations of every animal, plant or mineral that Syme cited. Readers can see for themselves Tile Red in the Cock Bullfinch's breast, Shrubby Pimpernel and Porcelain Jasper; or admire the Berlin Blue that Syme identified on the wing feathers of a Jay, in the Hepatica flower and in Blue Sapphire. Displays of contemporary collector's cabinets of birds, butterflies, eggs, flowers and minerals are interspersed at intervals throughout the compendium, with individual specimens colour matched to colour swatches. Still a much-loved reference among artists, naturalists and everyone fascinated by colour today, Werner's Nomenclature of Colours finds its fullest expression in this beautiful and comprehensive colour reference system.
Taking a color reference from an ancient text is refreshing. This book reminds us that saturated colors we have been using since the computer era is indeed artificial. Nature's hue is actually way more desaturated then we thought. And as "Green" has been and will always be our lifestyle of the 21st century, pastoral minimal neutral tones will be back. Or, indeed, they never are really out of our life.
This is a beautiful book with gorgeous reprints of the colour plates from Werner's Nomenclature of Colour and Syme's Colour Standard, as well as pictures of natural history museum/collections. The book also lays out the history of how these colour systems were developed and expanded, as well as examples of how they were utilized and their impact on the various sciences (e.g. Darwin). At the end, there is a very useful chart to cross reference Syme's colours to both Windsor & Newton and Caran D'Ache artist colours.
As a professional artist I loved seeing and reading about the assortment of color palettes based in various branches of science. I chose the palette based on butterfly and bug science to adopt for my own art projects. The index chart in the back of this book was very helpful as I tracked down watercolor and gouache paint tubes for my newly adopted color palette. Very enjoyable book and very useful for artists!
I have a copy of a reprint of Syme’s Nomenclature of colour. And so this is an obvious follow on book. And it is beautiful. Not only the colours, but the examples of nature in which they can be found.
Me gustó mucho como incluye la historia de como se fueron estableciendo las nomenclaturas de referencia para colores, además de ir poniendo ejemplos por familia de color, incluyendo la "fórmula" para crear cada color y pinturas que lo usan en animales, plantas y minerales.