Desert sand is a very light and very weakly saturated reddish yellow colour which corresponds specifically to the coloration of sand. It may also be regarded as a deep tone of beige.
Desert sand was used by General Motors, along with "rosewood", as a paint color for their early Cadillacs.
In 1998, desert sand was made into a Crayola crayon colour.[1][2]
As its name suggests, sandy brown is a shade of brown which is similar to the color of some sands.
Earth yellow
Earth yellow is one of the twelve official camouflage colors of the United States Army.[3][4]
Sand
Sand is a color that resembles the color of beach sand. In fact, another name for this color is beach,[5] an alternate color name in use for this color since 1923.[6]
The first recorded use of sand as a color name in English was in 1627.[7]
The normalized color coordinates for sand are identical to ecru, which was first recorded as a color name in English in 1836.[8]
Desert is a color that resembles the color of the flat areas of a desert.
The first recorded use of desert as a color name in English was in 1920.[9]
The normalized color coordinates for desert are identical to fallow, wood brown and camel, which were first recorded as color names in English in 1000,[10] 1886,[11][a] and 1916,[13] respectively.
Sand dune (Drab)
Sand dune is a color that resembles the color of a sand dune composed of dark colored sand.
The first recorded use of sand dune as a color name in English was in 1925.[14]
The normalized color coordinates for sand dune are identical to the color names drab, mode beige and bistre brown, which were first recorded as color names in English, respectively, in 1686,[15] 1928,[16] and 1930.[17]
Field drab
Field drab is one of the twelve official camouflage colors of the United States Army.[3][4]
The tones of desert sand are called desert colors because they suggest the colors of the landscape of and of the design of the Native American cultures of the Southwestern United States. The desert colors are widely used (with both tones of sky blue or turquoise and tones of maroon to complement them) in Southwest Design.[18]
The colors desert sand, earth yellow, sand, and field drab are all on the list of the twelve standard camouflage colors used by the United States Department of the Army.[3][4]
Notes
^After recording "wood brown" in his 1886 book, Robert Ridgway further refined the details of its color coordinates in his 1912 publication.[12]
References
Bibliography
Maerz, Aloys John; Paul, Morris Rea (1930). A Dictionary of Color. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company. LCCN 30016563. OCLC 1150631.
Ridgway, Robert (1886). Nomenclature of Colors for Naturalists, Compendium of Useful Knowledge for Ornithologists. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. OCLC 768502.
Ridgway, Robert (1912). Color standards and color nomenclature. Washington, D.C.: Robert Ridgway. LCCN 13007093. OCLC 630954.
Citations
^Crayola crayon chronology:
^Current Crayola crayon colors:
^ a b cColor, marking, and camouflage pattern painting for armament command equipment, United States Department of the Army, 1988
^ a b cThe 12 official MERDC camouflage colors (color samples shown):
^Maerz & Paul, p. 48
^Maerz & Paul, p. 190
^Maerz & Paul, p. 48; Color Sample of Sand: p. 49 Plate 13 Color Sample B2
^Gove, Philip B., ed. (1961). "ecru". Merriam-Webster Unabridged. Springfield, MA: G. & C. Merriam. Retrieved 2022-10-26. First Known Use: 1836
^Maerz & Paul, p. 203; Color Sample of Desert: p. 47 Plate 12 Color Sample I7
^Maerz & Paul, p. 195; Color Sample of Fallow: p. 47 Plate 12 Color Sample B5
^Ridgway (1886), pp. 36, 54, 117; Color Sample of Wood Brown: Plate III fig. 19
^Ridgway (1912), p. 40; Color Sample of Wood Brown: Plate XL
^Maerz & Paul, p. 191; Color Sample of Camel: p. 49 Plate 15 Color Sample A6
^Maerz & Paul, p. 204; Color Sample of Sand Dune: p. 47 Plate 14 Color Sample B5