Buff is a pale yellow-brown color of a skinless skin of some animals.
As a quaternary color of RYB, it is a dark color produced by the same mixture of tertiary citron and russet colors.
Video Buff (colour)
Etimologi
The first recorded use of the word "buff" to describe a color is in The London Gazette of 1686, describes a uniform to be "... a Red Mantel with Buff-colored layer". This refers to the color of unrefined buffalo skin, such as soldiers worn for protection: a death witness in Edgehill Battle (1642) from Sir Edmund Verney notes "he will not wear a weapon [armor] or a fighting day's buff mantle". Such leather buys are suitable for buffing or serve as buffers between the polished objects. It is not clear which "buffalo" cow is meant, but there may be no animals called "buffalo" today.
Term derived
The word "enthusiast" which means "enthusiast" or "expert" (English English) comes from the color of "fans", especially from the colorful uniform appearance of 19th century New York City firefighter volunteers, who inspired partisan followers among who are very interested in firefighting.
"In fans", today means bare, originally applied to British soldiers dressed in their uniform leather cloaks until the 17th century. The "naked" tagging is due to the perception that the skin (English) is yellowish.
Maps Buff (colour)
In nature
Geology
Sand, rock, and loess tend to be enthusiasts in many areas.
Natural selection
Karena buff efektif dalam kamuflase, seringkali dipilih secara alami.
Many species are named for signs of fans, including fan hooked moths, bloated climbing mice, and at least sixty birds, including quails buffed by buffs, buffalo-filled bulales, and buffalo-tailed pigtails.
In culture
Architecture
In areas where seasoning raw materials are available, buffers and buildings can be found. The Cotswold Stone is an example of such material.
Stationery and art
Unless bleached or dyed, paper products, such as Manila paper, tend to be enthusiasts. Buff envelopes are widely used in commercial letters.
Buff Paper is sometimes favored by artists who are looking for a neutral background color for images, especially those that feature a white color.
Artificial selection
Animals and plants grown Buff has been created, including dogs, cats, and poultry. The word "buff" is used in the written standards of some descendants, and some, like the buffalo buff, are specifically called "buffs".
Clothing
Vest
In 16th and 17th century European cultures, vest vests ("vest" in American English), are considered appropriate casual attire.
Boot
In the 17th century, the traditional colors of the upper formal dress shoes were often described as "fans".
John Bull
The outfits depicted on John Bull, British national personification in general and Britain in particular, in political cartoons and similar graphic works, are often yellowish in color. Bull buffs, Bull's topcoats, trousers, and boots are typical of the 16th and 17th century England.
Military uniforms of the 17th century
Buff is a traditional European military uniform color. Buff has a good camouflage quality because sand, soil, and dry vegetation are flavoring in many areas.
"Buffer Coat"
The term "Buff's mantle" refers to part of the 17th century European military uniform. Such a coat is meant to protect the wearer, and the strongest and best skin tends to be an enthusiast, so the term "mantle of fans" comes to refer to all such coats, even if the colors vary.
British Army
The Royal East Kent regiment was nicknamed "The Buffs" from the color of their vests. The phrase 'Steady the Buffs!', Popularized by Rudyard Kipling in his 1888 'Soldiers Three', has its origins during the 2nd Battalion garrison duties in Malta. Adjutant Cotter, who does not want to appear in front of his official regiment, the 21st Fusiliers of the Kingdom (Northern England), spurred his men with the words: Steady, Fan! The Fusiliers are watching you. '
AS. Army
American Continental Army Uniforms are very polite and blue.
Buff is the traditional color of the US Army Quartermaster Corps.
The US Army Institute of Heraldry establishes a "buff" tincture for a particular feather coat, often treating it as a metal for the purposes of tincture rules.
AS. universities, fraternities, and schools
The colors of The George Washington University and Hamilton College are "fans and blue", imitating military uniforms General George Washington and continental troops. Both General Washington and Alexander Hamilton, as Chiefs of Staff, have a role in uniform design.
Other school colors described as "fans and blue" include Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., and Punahou School in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Buff is one of three colors of the Alpha Gamma Delta fraternity, and one of the two colors of the Delta Chi fraternity.
AS. country flag
The flags of Delaware and New Jersey, and former flags of New York and Maine, officially showcase "fans".
UK Politics
The colors (colors) of Whig, an 18th-century British political party as well as American ones, are color and blue enthusiasts.
White Star buff
The RMS Titanic funnel and all other White Star Line ships are designated to be "fans with black tops" to show their ownership. There is some uncertainty among the experts, however, for the exact color of what is now called "White Star buff". There are no paint or formulas that survive, and although there are many painted postcards and at least seven color photos of the White Star liner, the feel of these deep funnels varies by many factors including the conditions in which they were originally made and the aging of the pigments in which they were printed. Speaking primarily to scale modelers, the Titanic Research and Modeling Association currently recommends the color "in the Marschall color range", meaning the colors in the illustrations in a particular book.
As the paint colors are relatively inexpensive and available with ease, and one that runs well in addition to the almost universal black hull and white superstructure used on steamboats at the time, the White Star is far from the only shipping line to use the shadow of fans as the color of the funnel. Orient Line and Norddeutscher Lloyd use full-length enthusiasts without black toppers, while Canadian Pacific and Swedish American Line use a fan funnel with a corporate flag representation on them. The Bibby Line and Fyffes Line are two of the few companies that use the same "buff with a black top" scheme as the White Star, but with the same uncertainty as the colors used and how it is different from the famous White Star. scheme.
See also
- Beige, a similar color
- Tan, a slightly darker, redder color
- List of colors
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia