White
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White is the brightest color. White light can be made by putting all the other colors of light on the spectrum together. These other colors are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
Meaning of white
White is linked with light, goodness, innocence, purity, cleanliness and virginity. It is sometimes thought to be the color of perfection. The opposite of black, white usually has a positive connotation. White can stand for a successful beginning. In heraldry, white depicts faith and purity.
In advertising, white is linked with coolness and cleanliness because it is the color of snow. You can use white to show simplicity in high-tech products. White is an appropriate color for charitable organizations; angels are usually imagined wearing white clothes. White is associated with hospitals, doctors, and cleanliness, so you can use white to show safety when promoting medical products. White is often linked with low weight, low-fat food, and dairy products.
Tones of white color comparison chart
White Media
- Sirius A and B Hubble photo.jpg
Image of Sirius A and Sirius B taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. Sirius B, a white dwarf, is the faint pinprick of light to the lower left of the much brighter Sirius A.
- Apparition DB.JPG
The woman in white, a familiar figure in European ghost stories
- Apocalypse vasnetsov.jpg
The biblical Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Conquest, with a bow, rides a white horse. Death rides a pale or light green horse (painting by Viktor Vasnetsov, 1887).
In Taoism, white represents the yang or male energy, one of the two complementary natures of the universe.
- Paintings from the Chauvet cave (museum replica).jpg
Prehistoric paintings in Chauvet Cave, France (30,000 to 32,000 BC)
- Ägyptischer Maler um 1360 v. Chr. 001.jpg
Painting of the goddess Isis (1380–1385 BC). The priests of her cult wore white linen.
- Maler der Grabkammer des Thot 001.jpg
Paintings of women in white from a tomb (1448–1422 BC).
- Chief Vestal.jpg
Statue of the chief Vestal Virgin, wearing a white palla and a white veil.
- Sodoma - Life of St Benedict, Scene 31 - Benedict Feeds the Monk - WGA21581.jpg
The monks of the order of Saint Benedict (c. 480–542) first dressed in undyed white or gray wool robes, here shown in painting by Sodoma on the life of Saint Benedict (1504). They later changed to black robes, the color of humility and penitence.