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Mauve (, ; , ) is a pale purple color named after the mallow flower (French: ''mauve''). The first use of the word ''mauve'' as a color was in 1796–98 according to the ''Oxford English Dictionary'', but its use seems to have been rare before 1859. Another name for the color is mallow, with the first recorded use of ''mallow'' as a color name in English in 1611. Mauve contains more gray and more blue than a pale tint of magenta. Many pale wildflowers called "blue" are more accurately classified as mauve. Mauve is also sometimes described as pale violet.


Mauveine, the first commercial aniline dye

The synthetic dye mauve was first so named in 1859. Chemist William Henry Perkin, then eighteen, was attempting in 1856 to synthesize quinine, which was used to treat malaria. He noticed an unexpected residue, which turned out to be the first aniline dye. Perkin originally named the dye Tyrian purple after the historical dye, but the product was renamed ''mauve'' after it was marketed in 1859. It is now usually called ''Perkin's mauve'', ''mauveine'', or ''aniline purple''. Earlier references to a mauve dye in 1856–1858 referred to a color produced using the semi-synthetic dye
murexide Murexide (NH4C8H4N5O6, or C8H5N5O6·NH3), also called ammonium purpurate or MX, is the ammonium salt of purpuric acid. It is a purple solid that is soluble in water. The compound was once used as an indicator reagent. Aqueous solutions are yell ...
or a mixture of natural dyes. Perkin was so successful in marketing his discovery to the dye industry that his biography by Simon Garfield is simply entitled ''Mauve''. Between 1859 and 1861, mauve became a fashion must have. The weekly journal '' All the Year Round'' described women wearing the colour as "all flying countryward, like so many migrating birds of purple paradise". ''Punch'' magazine published cartoons poking fun at the huge popularity of the colour: “The Mauve Measles are spreading to so serious an extent that it is high time to consider by what means heymay be checked.” But, because it faded easily, the success of mauve dye was short-lived, and by 1873 it was replaced by other synthetic dyes. As the memory of the original dye soon receded, the contemporary understanding of mauve is as a lighter, less-saturated color than it was originally known. The 1890s are sometimes referred to in retrospect as the "''Mauve Decade''" because of the popularity of the subtle color among progressive artistic types, both in Europe and the US.


Variations


Rich mauve

The color displayed at right is the rich tone of mauve called ''mauve'' by Crayola.


French mauve (deep mauve)

The color displayed at right is the deep tone of mauve that is called ''mauve'' b
Pourpre.com
a color list widely popular in France.


Opera mauve

The color displayed at right is opera mauve. The first recorded use of ''opera mauve'' as a color name in English was in 1927.


Mauve taupe

The color displayed at right is mauve taupe. The first recorded use of ''mauve taupe'' as a color name in English was in 1925.


Old mauve

The color displayed at right is old mauve. The first recorded use of ''old mauve'' as a color name in English was in 1925. The
normalized color coordinates Normalization or normalisation refers to a process that makes something more normal or regular. Most commonly it refers to: * Normalization (sociology) or social normalization, the process through which ideas and behaviors that may fall outside of ...
for old mauve are identical to wine dregs, which was first recorded as a color name in English in 1924.Maerz and Paul ''A Dictionary of Color'' New York:1930 McGraw-Hill Page 207; Color Sample of Wine Dregs Page 37 Plate 7 Color Sample L7


See also

* Shades of purple ** Lilac (color) * Malvaria (Pyroluria), from the term ''mauve factor'' in Orthomolecular psychiatry


References


External links

* {{Authority control Shades of pink Shades of violet