
Friday 6 March 2026
Question: Which of these colors — red, orange, yellow, green, cyan, blue, magenta — never existed in the spectrum, let alone in a rainbow?
In physics the visible spectrum extends from red at the long-wave end to blue at the other. But artistically we think of it as a continuous circle or wheel with an extraspectral realm of hues centering on magenta — none of which exist as a wavelength — bridging those two ends.
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Our brains work that magic on us whenever we see a color that has some red and some blue but little or nothing between.
That’s right. Magenta is imaginary.
For some hypothetical fun, picture that situation as a bell curve of light at the red end and an identical bell curve at the blue end, causing us to perceive magenta (1).





Now let’s start sliding those two bumps together toward the middle. You’ll see the saturation decrease (2) until it reaches neutral gray (3). As the bumps keep drawing closer to each other (4), you’ll notice the saturation picking back up again but now it’s greenish. As they merge into a single bell curve at the center of the visual spectrum (5), you see fully saturated green.
So there you are: Two light sources on either side of green will average out to green to you if they’re fairly close to each other. But if they’re far enough apart, they still average green in reality but instead you see magenta. Enjoy it. We’re wired that way.
Now those purplish hues can show up in partially or fully doubled rainbows where the blue of one overlaps the red of another. But neither by itself can display them because they simply don’t exist.
elow are some of the rarest or otherwise most intriguing colors you’ll likely encounter, including an option to change their ordering style, should you like, to make certain types easier to locate.
History, surprise, nostalgia, decorating ideas, and maybe even a few cheap thrills await as you ROLL OVER each of the swatches to see their stories.
While quite a few of these colors are solidly standardized, others in this set reflect some difference-splitting among conflicting sources or, at the very least, educated guessing.* Of the earthbound specimens, some are liquids (dyes), some are solids (pigments), and one is actually a gas.
Good, powerful blues that don’t fade or change color have always been tricky to pull off, so it can be illuminating to see how different eras and technologies rose to that challenge. When it comes to a purple dye, Mauve, there seems to be some dispute. We tend to think of that color as a rather soft-spoken one — subtle and grayish. But since the original swatch dating back to its 1856 discovery looks like anything but, that’s the version I show.
Hershey’s trademark purplish brown, which the company calls “Dark Sienna” and whose RGB of 56-18-22 must be etched in stone somewhere, is one of my more recent additions.
If you should come across another color you think might fit into this assortment — a truly distinctive one with a rolicking good story — do let me know.
Again, just ROLL YOUR CURSOR over each swatch to find out about it.

Rod 
Blue
Cone
Green
Cone
Red
Cone
Alice Blue 
Chartreuse 
Cochineal 
Coventry
Blue
Charoite 
Gamboge 
Indian
Yellow
Indigo A 
Indigo B 
Magenta 
Prussian
Blue
Mauve 
Radium
Glow
Turkey 
Puce 
Sienna 
Tyrian
Purple
Royal Blue 
Umber 
Cudbear 
Mickey Moose Red 
Scheele’s
Green
Maya Blue 
Minium 
Manganese
Violet
Purple of
Cassius
Han Purple 
Drunk
Tank Pink
Puccoon 
CF3NO 
Realgar 
Verdigris 
Mummy 
Vermilion 
Quercitron 
Eigengrau 
Ultramarine 
Ultramarine
Red
Smaragdine 
Dragon’s
Blood
Smalt 
Pigeon Blood 
NTP Yellow 
Hooker’s
Green
Falu 
Vicuña 
Alkanet 
Mixite 
Annatto 
Blue
Fugate
YInMn
Blue
Solferino 
Orpiment 
Delft Blue 
Cadmium
Yellow
Hershey
Brown
John Deere
Green
Kermes Red 
Payne’s
Gray
Egyptian
Blue
Celadon 
Caput
Mortuüm
Violacein 
Amaranth 
Semple’s
Pink
Sequoia 
Tavush Green 
Cosmic
Latte
V Hydrae 
Alnitak 
Cesium 
The Sun(?) 
Mercury 
Venus 
Earth 
Moon 
Mars 
Jupiter 
Saturn 
Enceladus 
Uranus 
Neptune 
Pluto
The 1830s ad copy for the quack remedy made from Gamboge (swatch shown above), Dr. Morrison’s Vegetable Pills, showing the patient awaking to find he’s turned into carrots, radishes, and a turnip:
“WONDERFUL EFFECT OF MORRISON’S VEGETABLE PILLS
They told me if I took 1000 pills at night I should be quite another thing in the morning.”
*Please note that your monitor may shift these colors a bit from what someone else’s displays.












