Forgotten pioneers of color order. Part I: Gaspard Grégoire (1751–1846) |
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Authors: | Rolf G Kuehni |
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Affiliation: | 4112 Blaydes Court, Charlotte, NC 28226 |
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Abstract: | Some 100 years before Albert Munsell developed his color order system, French silk merchant and inventor of a technology for producing works of art in silk velours, Gaspard Grégoire, introduced a color order system based on the color attributes hue, (relative) chroma, and lightness. Conceived in the mid‐1780s, an atlas with 1350 samples was produced before 1813 and found use in French Royal manufacturing operations and educational institutions. It was followed a few years later by one with 343 samples. Grégoire's work was subsequently overshadowed by Michel‐Eugene Chevreul's more complicated and less intuitive hemispherical system of 1839. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Col Res Appl, 33, 5–9, 2008 |
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Keywords: | color order system history |
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