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Buff (colour)

Buff (Latin: bubalinus)[2][3] is a light brownish yellow, ochreous colour, typical of buff leather.[4][5] Buff is a mixture of yellow ochre and white:[6] two parts of white lead and one part of yellow ochre produces a good buff, or white lead may be tinted with French ochre alone.[7]

Buff
 
    Colour coordinates
Hex triplet#DAA06D
sRGBB (r, g, b)(218, 160, 109)
HSV (h, s, v)(28°, 50%, 85%)
CIELChuv (L, C, h)(70, 60, 43°)
SourceMaerz and Paul
ISCC–NBS descriptorModerate orange yellow
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte)
Buff as an RYB quaternary colour
  citron
  buff[1]
  russet

As an RYB quaternary colour, it is the colour produced by an equal mix of the tertiary colours citron and russet.[8]

Etymology edit

 
Buff after A. Maerz[9]
 
Standard buff after A. S. Jennings. [10]
 
Buff after R. Ridgway.[11]

The first recorded use of the word buff to describe a colour was in The London Gazette of 1686, describing a uniform to be "...a Red Coat with a Buff-colour'd lining".[12] It referred to the colour of undyed buffalo leather, such as soldiers wore as some protection:[13] an eyewitness to the death in the Battle of Edgehill (1642) of Sir Edmund Verney noted "he would neither put on arms [armour] or buff coat the day of the battle".[14][15] Such buff leather was suitable for buffing or serving as a buffer between polished objects. It is not clear which bovine "buffalo" referred to, but it may not have been any of the animals called "buffalo" today.[16]

Derived terms edit

The word buff meaning "enthusiast" or "expert" (US English) derives from the colour "buff", specifically from the buff-coloured uniform facings of 19th-century New York City volunteer firemen, who inspired partisan followers among particularly keen fire watchers.[17]

"In the buff", today meaning naked, originally applied to English soldiers wearing the buff leather tunic that was their uniform until the 17th century. The "naked" signification is due to the perception that (English) skin is buff-coloured.[18]

In nature edit

Geology edit

Sand, rock, and loess tend to be buff in many areas.

Natural selection edit

Because buff is effective in camouflage, it is often naturally selected.

Many species are named for their buff markings, including the buff arches moth, the buff-bellied climbing mouse, and at least sixty birds, including the buff-fronted quail-dove, the buff-vented bulbul, and the buff-spotted flufftail.

In culture edit

Architecture edit

In areas where buff raw materials are available, buff walls and buildings may be found. Cotswold stone is an example of such a material.

Stationery and art edit

Unless bleached or dyed, paper products, such as Manila paper, tend to be buff. Buff envelopes are used extensively in commercial mailings.

Buff paper is sometimes favoured by artists seeking a neutral background colour for drawings, especially those featuring the colour white.

Artificial selection edit

Buff domesticated animals and plants have been created, including dogs, cats, and poultry. The word buff is used in written standards of several breeds, and some, such as the Buff turkey, are specifically named "buff".

Clothing edit

In 16th- and 17th-century European cultures, buff waistcoats ("vests" in American English), were considered proper casual wear. In the 17th century, the traditional colour of formal dress boot uppers was often described as "buff".

John Bull edit

Clothing depicted on John Bull, a national personification of Britain in general and England in particular,[19] in political cartoons and similar graphic works, has often been buff coloured.[20] Bull's buff waistcoats, topcoats,[21] trousers[22] and boot uppers[23] were typical of 18th- and 19th-century Englishmen.[21]

17th-century military uniforms edit

Buff is a traditional European military uniform colour. Buff has good camouflage qualities as sand, soil, and dry vegetation are buff in many areas. The term buff coat refers to a part of 17th-century European military uniforms. Such coats were intended to protect the wearer, and the strongest and finest leathers tend to be buff, so the term "buff coats" came to refer to all such coats, even if the colour varied.[citation needed]

The British army edit

The Royal East Kent Regiment was nicknamed "The Buffs" from the colour of their waistcoats. The phrase "Steady the Buffs!", popularised by Rudyard Kipling in his 1888 work Soldiers Three, has its origins during 2nd Battalion's garrison duties in Malta. Adjutant Cotter, not wanting to be shown up in front of his former regiment, the 21st Royal (North British) Fusiliers, spurred his men on with the words: "Steady, the Buffs! The Fusiliers are watching you."[24]

U.S. Army edit

The uniform of the American Continental Army was buff and blue.[13]

Buff is the traditional colour of the U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps.

The U.S. Army Institute of Heraldry specifies a "buff" tincture for certain coats of arms, often treating it as a metal for purposes of the rule of tincture.

U.S. universities, fraternities and schools edit

The colours of George Washington University and Hamilton College are buff and blue, modelled on the military uniform of General George Washington and the Continental Army. Both General Washington and Alexander Hamilton, as chief of staff, had a role in the design of the uniforms.

Other school colours described as "buff and blue" include Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., and Punahou School in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Buff is one of three colours of the Alpha Gamma Delta fraternity, and one of two colours of the Delta Chi fraternity.

U.S. state flags edit

The flags of Delaware and New Jersey, and the former flags of New York and Maine, officially feature buff.

Political usage edit

The colours of the Whig Party, a British political faction, and later political party, as well as the American Whig Party, were buff and blue.[13]

White Star buff edit

The funnels of the RMS Titanic and all other ships of the White Star Line were designated to be "buff with a black top" in order to indicate their ownership. There is some uncertainty among experts, however, as to the exact shade of what is now called "White Star buff". There is no surviving paint or formula, and although there are many painted postcards and at least seven colour photographs of White Star liners, the shades of the funnels in these varies due to many factors including the conditions under which they were originally made and the ageing of the pigments in which they were printed. Speaking mostly to scale modellers, the Titanic Research and Modelling Association currently recommend a colour "in the range of the Marschall color", meaning the colour in illustrations in a particular book.[25][26]

As a relatively inexpensive and readily available paint colour, and one which went well alongside the near-universal black hull and white superstructure used on steamships at the time, White Star was far from the only shipping line to use a shade of buff as a funnel colour. The Orient Line and Norddeutscher Lloyd used an entirely buff funnel without the black top, while Canadian Pacific and the Swedish American Line employed a buff funnel with a representation of the company's house flag on them. The Bibby Line and the Fyffes Line are two of several firms to use the same "buff with a black top" scheme as White Star, but with a similar lack of certainty as to the exact shade used and how this differed from the famous White Star scheme.

In Canadian heraldry edit

As well as being a colour used by the United States Army Institute of Heraldry, buff is also recognised as a tincture by the Canadian Heraldic Authority. It appears on the heraldic badge and flag of the Correctional Service of Canada.[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . PaintAssistant. Archived from the original on 28 June 2013. Retrieved 29 December 2012. RGB approximations of RYB tertiary colours, using cubic interpolation. The colours displayed here are substantially paler than the true colours a mixture of paints would produce.
  2. ^ William T. Stearn. Botanical Latin. History, Grammar Syntax, Terminology and Vocabulary. Third edition, revised. David & Charles, Newton Abbot, London 1990
  3. ^ E. Short, A. George. A Primer of Botanical Latin with Vocabulary. Cambridge University Press, 2013
  4. ^ The Oxford English Dictionary (OED). Second Edition (20 Volume Set). Clarendon Press, 1989
  5. ^ Paterson, Ian (2003). A Dictionary of Colour (1st paperback ed.). London: Thorogood (published 2004). p. 73. ISBN 1-85418-375-3. OCLC 60411025.
  6. ^ A. G. Abbott. The color of life. 1947
  7. ^ G. D. Armstrong. Cyclopedia of painting. 1908
  8. ^ William J. Miskella, 1928, Practical Color Simplified: A Handbook on Lacquering, Enameling, Coloring And Painting; John Lemos, 1920, "Color Charts for the School Room", in School Arts, vol. 19, pp 580–584
  9. ^ A. Maerz, M. Rea Paul. A Dictionary of Color. 1950
  10. ^ A. S. Jennings. Paint and Colour Mixing. A Practical Handbook for Painters. 1906
  11. ^ R. Ridgway. A nomenclature of colors for naturalists - and compendium of useful knowledge for ornithologists. 1886.
  12. ^ "buff, adj.1". Oxford English Dictionary. OUP. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
  13. ^ a b c St. Clair, Kassia (2016). The Secret Lives of Colour. London: John Murray. pp. 242–243. ISBN 9781473630819. OCLC 936144129.
  14. ^ Miriam Slater, Family Life in the Seventeenth Century: the Verneys of Claydon House 1984:11.
  15. ^ Carlton, Charles (2002). Going to the Wars: The Experience of the British Civil Wars 1638-1651. London and New York: Routledge. p. 192. ISBN 9781134849352 – via Google Books.
  16. ^ Barnhart, Robert K. (1995). The Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology: The Origins of American English Words. New York: Harper Collins. p. 90. ISBN 0-06-270084-7.
  17. ^ Robert W. Masters "What is a Fire Buff?", Pictorial History of Firefighting, revised edition, 1967; Steve Hanson, "Fire buffs: who are they?".
  18. ^ "The meaning and origin of the expression: In the buff". The Phrase Finder.
  19. ^ Taylor, Miles (2006) [2004]. "Bull, John (supp. fl. 1712–)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/68195. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  20. ^ "John Bull Running". Sterling Times. Retrieved 7 August 2012.
  21. ^ a b "AngloMania: Tradition and Transgression in British Fashion", Metropolitan Museum of Art (2006), exhibition brochure, p. 2.
  22. ^ Matthews, Stella (February 2000). . "Best of British" Magazine. Archived from the original on 28 June 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012. while the figure with which we're most familiar, the portly one resplendent in top hat, top boots, buff-coloured trousers, swallow-tailed coat, and sporting the British flag on his waistcoat, was the work of Sir Carruthers Gould as depicted in the Westminster Gazette in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
  23. ^ "John Bull and His Bulldog". Gold Posters. Archived from the original on 25 January 2013. Retrieved 7 August 2012.
  24. ^ "Buffs (Royal East Kent Regiment) - Famous Units - Research - National Army Museum, London".
  25. ^ The TRMA recommend the colour on found on "pp. 54, 60-61, and 67 of the new book Art of Titanic", presumably Ken Marschall's Art of Titanic 978-0786864553.
  26. ^ Braunschweiger, TRMA, Art. . Titanic Research and Modeling Association (TRMA). Archived from the original on 12 October 2011. Retrieved 28 July 2012. An earlier version of this article appeared on the TRMA website in October 2004 under the title "Photographic and Illustrative Evidence of White Star Buff." In December 2004, the article was rewritten under its present title to reflect new evidence and new debate on the subject since the writing of the original article.
  27. ^ General, The Office of the Secretary to the Governor (12 November 2020). "Correctional Service of Canada [Civil Institution]". reg.gg.ca.

buff, colour, buff, latin, bubalinus, light, brownish, yellow, ochreous, colour, typical, buff, leather, buff, mixture, yellow, ochre, white, parts, white, lead, part, yellow, ochre, produces, good, buff, white, lead, tinted, with, french, ochre, alone, buff, . Buff Latin bubalinus 2 3 is a light brownish yellow ochreous colour typical of buff leather 4 5 Buff is a mixture of yellow ochre and white 6 two parts of white lead and one part of yellow ochre produces a good buff or white lead may be tinted with French ochre alone 7 Buff Colour coordinatesHex triplet DAA06DsRGBB r g b 218 160 109 HSV h s v 28 50 85 CIELChuv L C h 70 60 43 SourceMaerz and PaulISCC NBS descriptorModerate orange yellowB Normalized to 0 255 byte Buff as an RYB quaternary colour citron buff 1 russetAs an RYB quaternary colour it is the colour produced by an equal mix of the tertiary colours citron and russet 8 Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Derived terms 2 In nature 2 1 Geology 2 2 Natural selection 3 In culture 3 1 Architecture 3 2 Stationery and art 3 3 Artificial selection 3 4 Clothing 3 4 1 John Bull 3 4 2 17th century military uniforms 3 4 2 1 The British army 3 5 U S Army 3 6 U S universities fraternities and schools 3 7 U S state flags 3 8 Political usage 3 9 White Star buff 3 10 In Canadian heraldry 4 See also 5 ReferencesEtymology edit nbsp Buff after A Maerz 9 nbsp Standard buff after A S Jennings 10 nbsp Buff after R Ridgway 11 The first recorded use of the word buff to describe a colour was in The London Gazette of 1686 describing a uniform to be a Red Coat with a Buff colour d lining 12 It referred to the colour of undyed buffalo leather such as soldiers wore as some protection 13 an eyewitness to the death in the Battle of Edgehill 1642 of Sir Edmund Verney noted he would neither put on arms armour or buff coat the day of the battle 14 15 Such buff leather was suitable for buffing or serving as a buffer between polished objects It is not clear which bovine buffalo referred to but it may not have been any of the animals called buffalo today 16 Derived terms edit The word buff meaning enthusiast or expert US English derives from the colour buff specifically from the buff coloured uniform facings of 19th century New York City volunteer firemen who inspired partisan followers among particularly keen fire watchers 17 In the buff today meaning naked originally applied to English soldiers wearing the buff leather tunic that was their uniform until the 17th century The naked signification is due to the perception that English skin is buff coloured 18 In nature editGeology edit Sand rock and loess tend to be buff in many areas nbsp Buff sand nbsp Buff rock at the top of a cliff nbsp Buff loessNatural selection edit Because buff is effective in camouflage it is often naturally selected nbsp Buff bands on a snake nbsp A moth with buff wingtips Phalera bucephala nbsp The buff wingtips of this moth aid in camouflage nbsp Buff fungiMany species are named for their buff markings including the buff arches moth the buff bellied climbing mouse and at least sixty birds including the buff fronted quail dove the buff vented bulbul and the buff spotted flufftail nbsp A pair of northern buffed cheeked gibbons nbsp The buff banded rail nbsp The buff necked ibis nbsp The burnished buff tanagerIn culture editArchitecture edit In areas where buff raw materials are available buff walls and buildings may be found Cotswold stone is an example of such a material nbsp Traditional buff stone buildings nbsp Modern buff brick buildings centre Stationery and art edit Unless bleached or dyed paper products such as Manila paper tend to be buff Buff envelopes are used extensively in commercial mailings nbsp Manila paper nbsp Buff envelopesBuff paper is sometimes favoured by artists seeking a neutral background colour for drawings especially those featuring the colour white nbsp Red and white chalk portrait on buff paper nbsp Black chalk with brown wash heightened with white on buff paper nbsp Graphite drawing with watercolour wash on buff paperArtificial selection edit Buff domesticated animals and plants have been created including dogs cats and poultry The word buff is used in written standards of several breeds and some such as the Buff turkey are specifically named buff nbsp A buff gun dog nbsp A buff mousing cat nbsp A buff chicken nbsp The Buff Orpington Duck nbsp The rose cultivar Buff Beauty Clothing edit In 16th and 17th century European cultures buff waistcoats vests in American English were considered proper casual wear In the 17th century the traditional colour of formal dress boot uppers was often described as buff nbsp 17th century English musician wearing a buff waistcoat nbsp 17th century Italian nobleman wearing buff dress boot uppersJohn Bull edit Clothing depicted on John Bull a national personification of Britain in general and England in particular 19 in political cartoons and similar graphic works has often been buff coloured 20 Bull s buff waistcoats topcoats 21 trousers 22 and boot uppers 23 were typical of 18th and 19th century Englishmen 21 nbsp Early depiction of John Bull with the buff clothing typical of an 18th century Englishman nbsp John Bull wearing buff dress boot uppers nbsp John Bull wearing buff trousers17th century military uniforms edit Buff is a traditional European military uniform colour Buff has good camouflage qualities as sand soil and dry vegetation are buff in many areas The term buff coat refers to a part of 17th century European military uniforms Such coats were intended to protect the wearer and the strongest and finest leathers tend to be buff so the term buff coats came to refer to all such coats even if the colour varied citation needed nbsp Buff German uniforms nbsp Dry vegetation in EuropeThe British army edit The Royal East Kent Regiment was nicknamed The Buffs from the colour of their waistcoats The phrase Steady the Buffs popularised by Rudyard Kipling in his 1888 work Soldiers Three has its origins during 2nd Battalion s garrison duties in Malta Adjutant Cotter not wanting to be shown up in front of his former regiment the 21st Royal North British Fusiliers spurred his men on with the words Steady the Buffs The Fusiliers are watching you 24 nbsp Soldier of The Buffs Royal East Kent Regiment wearing a new Red Coat lin d with a Buff colour d lining Breeches of the same colour as the Coat lining U S Army edit The uniform of the American Continental Army was buff and blue 13 Buff is the traditional colour of the U S Army Quartermaster Corps The U S Army Institute of Heraldry specifies a buff tincture for certain coats of arms often treating it as a metal for purposes of the rule of tincture nbsp Continental Army uniforms The Buff and Blue nbsp US chevron quartermaster sergeant insignia 1902 1909 buff on black with blue detail nbsp USAIH illustration which specifies a buff colored vertical rectangular embroidered item U S universities fraternities and schools edit See also Hail to the Buff and Blue The colours of George Washington University and Hamilton College are buff and blue modelled on the military uniform of General George Washington and the Continental Army Both General Washington and Alexander Hamilton as chief of staff had a role in the design of the uniforms Other school colours described as buff and blue include Gallaudet University in Washington D C and Punahou School in Honolulu Hawaii Buff is one of three colours of the Alpha Gamma Delta fraternity and one of two colours of the Delta Chi fraternity nbsp General Washington wearing the buff and blue nbsp George Washington University banners featuring the buff and blue nbsp The buff and blue logo of the George Washington University ColonialsU S state flags edit The flags of Delaware and New Jersey and the former flags of New York and Maine officially feature buff nbsp nbsp The flag of Delaware includes a background of colonial blue surrounding a diamond of buff nbsp nbsp The flag of New Jersey has the State seal in Jersey blue on a buff background nbsp nbsp Former flag of New York until 1901 nbsp nbsp The 1901 Maine Flag flown from 1901 to 1909Political usage edit The colours of the Whig Party a British political faction and later political party as well as the American Whig Party were buff and blue 13 nbsp Depiction of the Whig Charles James Fox wearing buff and blueWhite Star buff edit The funnels of the RMS Titanic and all other ships of the White Star Line were designated to be buff with a black top in order to indicate their ownership There is some uncertainty among experts however as to the exact shade of what is now called White Star buff There is no surviving paint or formula and although there are many painted postcards and at least seven colour photographs of White Star liners the shades of the funnels in these varies due to many factors including the conditions under which they were originally made and the ageing of the pigments in which they were printed Speaking mostly to scale modellers the Titanic Research and Modelling Association currently recommend a colour in the range of the Marschall color meaning the colour in illustrations in a particular book 25 26 As a relatively inexpensive and readily available paint colour and one which went well alongside the near universal black hull and white superstructure used on steamships at the time White Star was far from the only shipping line to use a shade of buff as a funnel colour The Orient Line and Norddeutscher Lloyd used an entirely buff funnel without the black top while Canadian Pacific and the Swedish American Line employed a buff funnel with a representation of the company s house flag on them The Bibby Line and the Fyffes Line are two of several firms to use the same buff with a black top scheme as White Star but with a similar lack of certainty as to the exact shade used and how this differed from the famous White Star scheme nbsp Ships of the White Star Line such as the RMS Oceanic pictured here and the Titanic had buff funnels with black tops In Canadian heraldry edit As well as being a colour used by the United States Army Institute of Heraldry buff is also recognised as a tincture by the Canadian Heraldic Authority It appears on the heraldic badge and flag of the Correctional Service of Canada 27 See also edit nbsp Look up buff in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Buff colour List of colours Beige a similar colour Fallow Tan a slightly darker redder colour TawnyReferences edit Convertor from RYB to RGB PaintAssistant Archived from the original on 28 June 2013 Retrieved 29 December 2012 RGB approximations of RYB tertiary colours using cubic interpolation The colours displayed here are substantially paler than the true colours a mixture of paints would produce William T Stearn Botanical Latin History Grammar Syntax Terminology and Vocabulary Third edition revised David amp Charles Newton Abbot London 1990 E Short A George A Primer of Botanical Latin with Vocabulary Cambridge University Press 2013 The Oxford English Dictionary OED Second Edition 20 Volume Set Clarendon Press 1989 Paterson Ian 2003 A Dictionary of Colour 1st paperback ed London Thorogood published 2004 p 73 ISBN 1 85418 375 3 OCLC 60411025 A G Abbott The color of life 1947 G D Armstrong Cyclopedia of painting 1908 William J Miskella 1928 Practical Color Simplified A Handbook on Lacquering Enameling Coloring And Painting John Lemos 1920 Color Charts for the School Room in School Arts vol 19 pp 580 584 A Maerz M Rea Paul A Dictionary of Color 1950 A S Jennings Paint and Colour Mixing A Practical Handbook for Painters 1906 R Ridgway A nomenclature of colors for naturalists and compendium of useful knowledge for ornithologists 1886 buff adj 1 Oxford English Dictionary OUP Retrieved 21 April 2011 a b c St Clair Kassia 2016 The Secret Lives of Colour London John Murray pp 242 243 ISBN 9781473630819 OCLC 936144129 Miriam Slater Family Life in the Seventeenth Century the Verneys of Claydon House 1984 11 Carlton Charles 2002 Going to the Wars The Experience of the British Civil Wars 1638 1651 London and New York Routledge p 192 ISBN 9781134849352 via Google Books Barnhart Robert K 1995 The Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology The Origins of American English Words New York Harper Collins p 90 ISBN 0 06 270084 7 Robert W Masters What is a Fire Buff Pictorial History of Firefighting revised edition 1967 Steve Hanson Fire buffs who are they The meaning and origin of the expression In the buff The Phrase Finder Taylor Miles 2006 2004 Bull John supp fl 1712 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 68195 Subscription or UK public library membership required John Bull Running Sterling Times Retrieved 7 August 2012 a b AngloMania Tradition and Transgression in British Fashion Metropolitan Museum of Art 2006 exhibition brochure p 2 Matthews Stella February 2000 The Search for John Bull Best of British Magazine Archived from the original on 28 June 2012 Retrieved 7 September 2012 while the figure with which we re most familiar the portly one resplendent in top hat top boots buff coloured trousers swallow tailed coat and sporting the British flag on his waistcoat was the work of Sir Carruthers Gould as depicted in the Westminster Gazette in the late 1800s and early 1900s John Bull and His Bulldog Gold Posters Archived from the original on 25 January 2013 Retrieved 7 August 2012 Buffs Royal East Kent Regiment Famous Units Research National Army Museum London The TRMA recommend the colour on found on pp 54 60 61 and 67 of the new book Art of Titanic presumably Ken Marschall s Art of Titanic 978 0786864553 Braunschweiger TRMA Art White Star Buff Weighing the Evidence Titanic Research and Modeling Association TRMA Archived from the original on 12 October 2011 Retrieved 28 July 2012 An earlier version of this article appeared on the TRMA website in October 2004 under the title Photographic and Illustrative Evidence of White Star Buff In December 2004 the article was rewritten under its present title to reflect new evidence and new debate on the subject since the writing of the original article General The Office of the Secretary to the Governor 12 November 2020 Correctional Service of Canada Civil Institution reg gg ca Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buff colour amp oldid 1182576515, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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