ROY G. BIV : an exceedingly surprising book about color

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Where to find it

Park Library (School of Media & Journalism)

Call Number
BF789.C7 S74 2013
Status
Available

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Summary

Color is all around us every day. We use it to interpret the world-red means stop, blue means water, orange means construction. But it is also written into our metaphors, of speech and thought alike: yellow means cowardice; green means envy-unless you're in Germany, where yellow means envy, and you can be "beat up green and yellow."

Jude Stewart, a design expert and writer, digs into this rich subject with gusto. What color is the universe ? We might say it's black, but astrophysicists think it might be turquoise. Unless it's beige. To read about color from Jude Stewart is to unlock a whole different way of looking at the world around us-and bringing it all vividly to life.

The book itself is organized around the rainbow and is lavishly designed, with cross-references that liven up each page. (Follow the thread of imperialism, for example, from the pink-colored colonies on maps of the British Empire to the green wallpaper that might have killed Napoleon.) A lovingly packaged, distinctive book, it will be the only one of its kind.

ROY G. BIV is a reference and inspiration for designers and artists, as well as a unique, beautiful, and irresistible book for just about anyone.

Contents

Introduction -- Color: a pointillistic history and user's guide -- White -- Pink -- Red -- Orange -- Brown -- Yellow -- Green -- Blue -- Indigo and violet -- Gray -- Black -- Beyond the rainbow.

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