Iris (color)

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Iris flowers
Unidentified Iris Chanticleer Purple 2868px.jpg
An iris flower in the Chanticleer Garden in Pennsylvania
140614 Yagyu Iris Garden Nara Japan02bs5.jpg
The Yagyu Iris Garden in Nara, Japan
Rabbitear Iris Iris laevigata Flower 2305px.jpg
The taxonomical name of this Rabbitear Iris is Iris laevigata
The iris genus contains 260–300 species of flower, many of them of blue and purple shades.
Iris
 
Gtk-dialog-info.svg    Color coordinates
Hex triplet #5A4FCF
sRGB B (r, g, b)(90, 79, 207)
HSV (h, s, v)(245°, 62%, 81%)
CIELChuv (L, C, h)(42, 98, 268°)
SourceColorHexa
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte)

Iris is an ambiguous color term, usually referring to shades ranging from blue-violet to violet.

However, in certain applications, it has been applied to an even wider array of colors, including pale blue, mauve, pink, and even yellow (the color of the inner part of the iris flower). [1]

The name is derived from the iris flower, which comes in a broad spectrum of colors.

The first recorded use of iris as a color name in English was in the year 1916. [2]

See also

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Iris dolichosiphon is a plant species in the genus Iris, it is also in the subgenus Iris and in the section Pseudoregelia. It is a rhizomatous perennial, from China and Bhutan. It has long, thin dark green leaves, very short stem, and dark blue, purple, or violet flowers. That are mottled with white. It has thick white/orange beards. It has one subspecies, Iris dolichosiphon subsp. orientalis, from China, India and Burma. It has similar flowers. They are cultivated as ornamental plants in temperate regions

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Iris paradoxa is a species of flowering plant native to western Asia. It has large upright petals and smaller lower petals, which is unique amongst most iris forms. They come in various shades from white, lavender, mauve, medium purple, violet, dark purple to black. It has a black or purplish black beard on the lower petals. It comes from the region of Transcaucasia, and is found in the countries of Iran,, Turkey, Armenia and in Azerbaijan.

References

  1. ColorCharts.org: Color names including "iris" shows the wide range of different colors called "iris" by various paint companies (click on the name of each paint company):
  2. Maerz and Paul A Dictionary of Color New York:1930 McGraw-Hill Page 195; Color Sample of Iris: Page 109 Plate 43 Color Sample B5 (Note: The shade of Iris shown in this color sample is a pale mauve-lavender color)