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What Color Goes With Purple and Green

Color

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Discussion

red green blue

Color is a function of the human visual system, and is not an intrinsic property. Objects don't have a color, they give off light that appears to be a color. Spectral power distributions exist in the physical world, but color exists only in the mind of the beholder. Our perception of color is not an objective measure of anything about the light that enters our eyes, but it correlates pretty well with objective reality.

Color is determined first by frequency and then by how those frequencies are combined or mixed when they reach they eye. This is the physics part of the topic. Light falls on specialized receptor cells (called cones) at the back of the eye (called the retina) and a signal is sent to the brain along a neural pathway (called the optic nerve). This signal is processed by the part of the brain near the back of the skull (called the occipital lobe). Here's where the biology kicks in, or maybe it's the psychology, or maybe it's both. They eye is very much like a camera, but the brain is not at all like a video recorder. The brain is not like a computer with fixed hardware of transistors and capacitors executing some sort of software code. The neurons of the brain are probably best thought of as wetware — a fusion of hardware and software or maybe something completely different. I don't feel qualified to say much about that end of this process. Once the visual information leaves the eye, basic physics ends and neurocognition takes over.

Color is determined first by frequency. Let's start by determining what a typical person would see when looking at electromagnetic radiation of a single frequency. Physicists call this monochromatic light. (The literal meaning of this word is "single color", but the actual meaning is "single frequency".)

Low frequency radiation is invisible. With an adequately bright source, starting somewhere around 400 THz (1 THz = 1012 Hz) most humans begin to perceive a dull red. As the frequency is increased, the perceived color gradually changes from red to orange to yellow to green to blue to violet. The eye doesn't perceive violet so well. It always seems to look dark compared to other sources at equal intensity. Somewhere between 700 THz and 800 THz the world goes dark again.

A continuous spectrum running horizontally across the page

How many colors are there in the spectrum above? How many did I name?

red orange yellow green blue violet

The simple named colors are mostly monosyllabic English words — red, green, brown, black, white, gray. Brevity indicates an Old English (Anglo-Saxon) origin. Monosyllabic words are generally the oldest words in the English language — head, eye, nose, foot, cat, dog, cow, eat, drink, man, wife, house, sleep, rain, snow, sword, sheath, God…. These words go back more than fifteen centuries. Yellow, purple, and blue are exceptions to the one-syllable-equals-English rule. Yellow and purple are Old English color words with two syllables. Blue is a one syllable French word (bleu) that replaced a two syllable Old English word (hǽwen) eight hundred years ago.

Some of the names for colors are loan words from French (many of which are loan words from other languages). Since the ʒ (zh) sound doesn't exist in Old English, orange and beige are obviously French. (Garage is also an obviously French word.) The words violet and orange were the names of plants (nouns) before they were the names of colors (adjectives). Violet came from 14th century French, which came from Latin. Orange came from 16th century French, which came from Italian, which came from Arabic, which came from Persian, which came from Sanskrit.

English arose when three Germanic tribes — Angles, Saxons, and Jutes — migrated from continental Europe to the British Isles in the 5th century. The language they spoke is called Anglo-Saxon or Old English. You would hardly recognize this language if you heard it spoken or saw it written today. Danes probably have the best chance of understanding spoken Old English, Icelanders the best chance of understanding written Old English. Of the six named colors in my spectrum, only four were known to the Anglo-Saxons: reád, geolu, grÉne, hǽwen. Do you recognize any of them?

In the year 1066, an invasion of French speaking peoples — Normans, Bretons, and French — swept over the British Isles. The last Anglo-Saxon King of England, King Harold II, was succeeded by the first Norman king, William the Conqueror. The Normans had an odd empire (if that's even the word for it) that included the British Isles, northern France (appropriately named Normandy), southern Italy, Sicily, Syria, Cyprus, and Libya. William was a Norman, descended from Norsemen, but he spoke French not Swedish or Norwegian or Danish. One factor leading to the rise of the Normans in their scattered empire is their ability to quickly integrate themselves into the culture of the peoples they conquered. For purposes of this discussion, we care about language. When the Normans got to northern France, they started speaking French. When the Normans got to England they got the Anglo-Saxons to start speaking French too (sort of). In about a hundred years, Anglo-Saxon had mutated into something closer to what we would recognize as English today — neither French nor Anglo-Saxon. Old English became Middle English. This is when English acquired the words blue (which replaced hǽwen) and violet (which never existed as an English color word before).

rede ȝeoluw grene blu violet

The next change in the English language was one of pronunciation — the Great Vowel Shift (1400–1700). This is when silent e and other spelling rules that frustrate both native and second language speakers arose. The notion of long and short vowels also changed. At one time a long vowel was one that was pronounced for a longer time than a short vowel. Take the words pan and pane. Before the Great Vowel Shift, pan was pronounced "pan" and pane was pronounced "paaaneh" with a literal looong vowel and a non-silent "eh" at the end. Being mostly a change in pronunciation, the rise of Modern English around 1550 doesn't affect our discussion of color words. Movable type printing invented in Germany around 1445 is probably more important. Books became relatively plentiful, spelling became standardized, and tracking down the first occurrence of a word became easier. The Modern English period is when the words orange and indigo were first used to identify colors.

red orange yellow green blue indigo violet

I have issues with indigo. More on that later.

Early written occurrences of some color names in English Primary source: Oxford English Dictionary. Translations: Sean Crist, et al's Bosworth-Toller Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, Phil Barthram's Old English to Modern English Translator, University of Michigan's Middle English Dictionary.
Modern English
(Old English)
representative quote (year)
red
(reád)
on ðæs sacerdes hrægle scoldon hangigan bellan & ongemang ðæm bellum reade apla .
on the priest's robe should hang bells and among the bells, red apples.
King Alfred's West-Saxon version of Pope Gregory's Pastoral Care (~870)
yellow
(geolu)
Uyrmas mec ni auefun uyrdi cræftum, ða ði geolu godueb geatum frætuath .
Worms did not weave me with the skills of the fates, those that decorated the yellow cloth garment.
The Leiden Riddle (~900)
green
(grÉne)
siððan adam stop on grene græs, gaste geweorðad .
since Adam stepped on green grass, possessed of life.
The Genesis A, B story from the Cædmon Manuscript (~950)
blue
(hǽwen)
þou schalt þeos þreo cloþes do a non ech of heom in o Caudroun, for ich þe wolle segge sothþ þat þis on schal beo fair blu cloth, þis oþur grene, onder stond þis!
[I am unable to translate this from Middle English to modern English.]
Altenglische legenden a.k.a. Old English Legends compiled by Carl Horstmann (~1300)
violet
(n/a)
In Inde also may men fynd dyamaundz of violet colour and sum what browne, þe whilk er riȝt gude and full precious.
In India also men may find diamonds of violet colour (and somewhat brown), which are right good and full precious.
The Buke of John Maundeuill a.k.a. Mandeville's Travels (1425)
orange
(n/a)
no Person or Persons shall put to sale by Retail within this Realm any Cloth or Clothes … of other Colour or Colours than is hereafter expressed; that is to say, Scarlet, Red, Crimson, Murry, Violet, Puke, Brown-blue, Blacks, Greens, Yellows, Blues, Orange-tauny, Russet, Marble-gray, Sad new Colour, Azure, Watchet, Sheeps-colour, Lion-colour, Motley or Iron gray
Great Britain Statutes at Large (1552)
indigo
(n/a)
For a deepe and sad Greene, as in the inmost leaves of Trees, mingle Indico and Pinke.
The Compleat Gentleman by Henry Peacham (1622)

There is no physical significance in color names. It's all a matter of culture and culture depends on where you live, what language you speak, and what century it is. A given wave of light has the same frequency no matter who is viewing it, but the person perceiving the color will call it a word appropriate to their culture.

Color discrimination is probably the same for all people in all cultures (all people with properly working eyeballs). Did the English see orange or violet before the French told them about it? Of course they did. They probably called orange reád (red) or geolo-reád (yellow-red) and violet hǽwen (blue) or blæc-hǽwen (dark blue) because those were the words they had available.

Why is an orange called an orange but a lemon not called a yellow and a lime not called a green?

What would you call indigo if I showed it to you? Most certainly blue. I don't know anyone who uses the word indigo in everyday conversation. Maybe some painters do. That'd be about it for indigo as far as Modern English speakers were concerned. In some languages blue and indigo are equally significant color words. Maybe the real question is do we need blue, indigo, and violet?

Frequency determines color, but when it comes to light, wavelength is the easier thing to measure. A good approximate range of wavelengths for the visible spectrum is 400 nm to 700 nm (1 nm = 10−9 m) although most humans can detect light just outside that range. Since wavelength is inversely proportional to frequency the color sequence gets reversed. 400 nm is a dull violet (but violet always appears dull). 700 nm is a dull red.

Wavelength varies with the speed of light, which varies with medium. The speed of light is about 0.03% slower in air than in vacuum. If you're trying to understand color, wavelength is just as good as frequency.

We humans who speak English and live at the dawn of the 21st century have identified six wavelength bands in the electromagnetic spectrum as significant enough to warrant a designation with a special name. They are: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet. Where one color ends and another begins is a matter of debate as you will see in the table below.

Wavelength ranges for monochromatic light (nm) 1CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 1966. 2 Hazel Rossotti. Color. Princeton University Press, 1983. 3 Edwin R. Jones. Physics 153 Class Notes. University of South Carolina, 1999. 4 Deane B. Judd. Goethe's Theory of Colors. MIT Press, 1970.
color 1 2 3 4
red 647–700 647–760 630–700 620–800
orange 585–647 585–647 590–630 590–620
yellow 575–585 575–585 570–590 560–590
green 491–575 491–575 500–570 480–560
blue 424–491 424–491 450–500 450–480
violet 400–424 380–424 400–450 400–450

Which brings us to indigo. How many of you reading this learned about "Roy G. Biv" (Americans, I presume) or that "Richard of York gave battle in vain" (Britons, I presume)? Who among you learned that between blue and violet there was this special color called indigo?

Indigo. The only time I ever hear it is when my students recite the visible spectrum. Indigo is a color of relatively little importance. If indigo counts as a color then so should canary, and mauve, and puce, and brick, and teal, and so on. Where is their place in the spectrum?

A continuous spectrum running horizontally across the page

How many colors are there in this swatch? How many were you taught in elementary school? The inclusion of indigo in the spectrum goes back to Isaac Newton. More on this after the data table. If you believe that indigo is an important color, then here's a set of spectral tables for you.

Wavelength ranges for monochromatic light (nm) with indigo 5 Howard L. Cohen. AST 1002 Study Guide. University of Florida, 1999–2003. 6 J.L. Morton. Color Matters, 1995–2002. 7A Dictionary of Science. Oxford University Press, 2000. 8 Thomas Young. Theory of Light and Colours, 1802.
color 5 6 7 8
red 630–750 650–750 620–740 624–675
orange 590–630 590–640 585–575 598–624
yellow 570–590 550–580 575–858 557–598
green 490–570 490–530 500–575 515–557
blue 450–490 460–480 445–500 480–515
indigo 420–450 440–450 425–445 460–480
violet 380–420 390–430 390–425 425–460

Did Richard of York give battle in vain so that future citizens in the dismantled British Empire would forever remember indigo? Did Mr. and Mrs. Biv conceive little Roy G. so that future generations of Americans might learn the true nature of light? Where did indigo come from?

When Newton attempted to reckon up the rays of light decomposed by the prism and ventured to assign the famous number seven, he was apparently influenced by some lurking disposition towards mysticism, If any unprejudiced person will fairly repeat the experiment, he must soon be convinced that the various coloured spaces which paint the spectrum slide into each other by indefinite shadings: he may name four or five principal colors, but the subordinate spaces are evidently so multiplied as to be incapable of enumeration. The same illustrious mathematician, we can hardly doubt, was betrayed by a passion for analogy, when he imagined that the primary colours are distributed over the spectrum after the proportion of the diatonic scale of music, since those intermediate spaces have really no precise defined limits.

John Leslie, 1838

blah

rubeus aureus flavus viridis cæruleus indicus violaceus

blah

красный
krasniy
оранжевый
oranzhyeviy
жёлтый
zhyoltiy
зелёный
zyelyoniy
голубой
goluboy
синий
siniy
фиолетовый
fiolyetoviy

basic colour names, pl eleven colour names found in anthropological surveys to be in wide use in fully developed languages: white, black, red, green, yellow, blue, brown, grey, orange, purple, pink

The human eye can distinguish something on the order of 7 to 10 million colors — that's a number greater than the number of words in the English language (the largest language on Earth).

The retina…

The rods, which far outnumber the cones, respond to wavelengths in the middle portion of the spectrum of light. If you had only rods in your retina, you would see in black and white. The cones in our eyes provide us with our color vision. There are three types of cone, identified by a capital letter, each of which responds primarily to a region of the visible spectrum: L to long or red, M to medium or green, and S to shirt or blue.

Cone response curves

The peak sensitivities are 580 nm for red (L), 540 nm for green (M), and 440 nm for blue (S). Red and green cones respond to nearly all visible wavelengths, while blue cones are insensitive to wavelengths longer than 550 nm. The total response of all three cones together peaks at 560 nm — somewhere between yellow and green in the spectrum.

Paraphrase…

  • While red, green, and blue are spaced somewhat equally across the visible spectrum, the specific sensitivities of the L, M, and S cones are not. This might seem a little confusing, especially since the L cones aren't even closely centered on the red area of the spectrum. Fortunately, the spectral sensitivity of the cones is only one part of how the brain decodes color information. Additional processing takes these sensitivities into account.

Commission internationale de l'eclairage

Magnify

The relative response of the red and green cones to different colors of light are plotted on the horizontal and vertical axes, respectively. Values on the tongue shaped perimeter are for light of a single wavelength (in nanometers). Values within the curve are for light of mixed frequency. The point in the center labeled D65 corresponds to light from a blackbody radiator at 6500 K — the effective temperature of daylight at midday, a generally accepted standard value of white light.

white & black

Continuous, thermal spectra

blackbody color by temperature
1,000 K 6,500 K  (daylight) 10,000 K
Temperature (or effective temperature) of selected radiant sources
kelvin
temperature
radiant energy source
2.73 cosmic background radiation
306 human skin
500 household oven at its hottest
660 minimum temperature for incandescence
770 dull red heat
1,400 glowing coals, electric stove, electric toaster
1,900 candle flame
2,000 kerosene lamp
2,800 incandescent light bulb, 75 W
2,900 incandescent light bulb, 100 W
3,000 incandescent light bulb, 200 W
3,100 sunrise or sunset (effective)
3,200 professional studio lights
3,600 one hour after sunrise or one hour before sunset (effective)
4,000 two hours after sunrise or two hours before sunset (effective)
5,500 direct midday sunlight
6,500 daylight (effective)
7,000 overcast sky (effective)
20–30,000 lightning bolt
Color scale of temperature

This table is the result of an effort to interpret in terms of thermometric readings, the common expressions used in describing temperatures. It is obvious that these values are only approximations.

Handbook of Chemistry & Physics, Ninth Edition, 1922

color temperature
°C K
incipient red heat 500–550 770–820
dark red heat 650–750 0920–1020
bright red heat 850–950 1120–1220
yellowish red heat 1050–1150 1320–1420
incipient white heat 1250–1350 1520–1620
white heat 1450–1550 1720–1820
Metal temperature by color Source: Process Associates of America
color approximate temperature
°F °C K
faint red 930 500 770
blood red 1075 580 855
dark cherry 1175 635 910
medium cherry 1275 0690 0965
cherry 1375 0745 1020
bright cherry 1450 0790 1060
salmon 1550 0845 1115
dark orange 1630 0890 1160
orange 1725 0940 1215
lemon 1830 1000 1270
light yellow 1975 1080 1355
white 2200 1205 1480
Spectral classification of stars
T (K) class λ max (nm) color name examples
30,000 O 100 blue Naos, Mintaka
20,000 B 150 blue-white Spica, Rigel
10,000 A 290 white Sirius, Vega
8000 F 360 yellow-white Adhafera, Procyon
6000 G 480 yellow Sun, Alpha Centauri
4000 K 720 orange Arcturus, Aldebaran
3000 M 970 red Betelgeuse, Rao

additive color mixing

The absence of light is darkness. Add light and human eyes to the darkness and you get color — a perception of the human visual system. The retina at the back of the human eye has three types of neurons called cones, each sensitive to a different band of wavelengths — one long, one medium, and one short. The long wavelength cones are most stimulated by light that appears red, the medium wavelength cones by light that appears green, and the short wavelength cones by light that appears blue. A monochromatic wavelength of light (or a narrow band of wavelengths) can be selected as a representative for each of these colors. These become the primary colors of a system that can be used to reproduce other colors in a process known as additive color mixing.

Primary colors
black  + red  = red
black  + green  = green
black  + blue  = blue

When no light or not enough light falls on the retina, the brain perceives this nothing as the color black. When the light from two or more sources falls on adjacent rods in the retina, the brain perceives the combination as a different color. The rules for combinations of the primary colors are as follows…

Additive color mixing rules
nothing  = black
red  + green  = yellow
green  + blue  = cyan
blue  + red  = magenta
red + green  + blue  = white

Most of us with typical human eyes and a basic knowledge of the English language are familiar with the color yellow. This is probably not the case for cyan and magenta. Because inkjet printers (which have cyan, magenta, yellow, and black cartridges) are commonplace nowadays, it's not uncommon for people to recognize the words cyan and magenta, but not know how to pronounce them (ˈsīˌan and məˈjentə). As you'd expect given that it's a combination of blue and green light, cyan appears blue-green — something like the blue of the sky but not exactly. I'd say more like the semiprecious stone turquoise than anything else. Magenta is often confused with pink, but magenta is much more vibrant. Pink is desaturated red. Magenta is considered a pure color. (More on this later.) A close relative of magenta is fuchsia, which is a synthetic dye. I can't think of anything natural that looks like magenta.

These rules are better understood with a diagram than a series of equations.

Additive color wheel

Color mixing is not an all or nothing process. Red light and green light together appear yellow, it's true, but they can also appear orange when mixed if the red light is brighter than the green light. Red light and green light can be combined in other proportions to produce light that appears to be a color halfway between red and orange, and orange and yellow, and yellow and green. We can keep dividing and subdividing like this to produce new, distinct colors.

red red-orange orange orange-yellow yellow yellow-green green

One convenient way to represent some of the possibilities is with a continuous color wheel. Starting on the right side and going counterclockwise as is the tradition in mathematics, red is placed on the circumference at 0°, green at 120°, and blue at 240°. The complimentary colors are halfway between the primaries — yellow at 60°, cyan at 180°, and magenta at 300°. These numbers are called hue angles. White is at the origin. The distance from the origin to any point on the color wheel stated as a fraction of the radius is known as the saturation. White is completely desaturated. Its saturation is 0%. Colors with low saturation are often identified as pale or pastel. Colors with a high saturation are bright or vibrant. Colors with 100% saturation are said to be pure.

Magnify

more talk

  • optical, superposition: lamp overlap, projection TV with 3 CRTs
  • temporal, rapid alternation, persistence of vision: biased LED
  • spatial, small elements: TV/computer monitor pixels

[insert image - pixels?]

Purple and violet are similar, though purple is closer to red. In optics, there is an important difference; purple is a composite color made by combining red and blue, while violet is a spectral color, with its own wavelength on the visible spectrum of light.

subtractive color mixing

The absence of pigment is white paper. (The absence of pigment is paper that appears white when illuminated with white light.)

Add pigment to it. (Subtract certain wavelength ranges.)

Secondary colors
white  − red  = cyan
white  − green  = magenta
white  − blue  = yellow
Complementary color mixing rules
red  + cyan  = white
green  + magenta  = white
blue  + yellow  = white

Mix them.

Subtractive color mixing rules
nothing  = white
cyan  + magenta  = blue
magenta  + yellow  = red
yellow  + cyan  = green
cyan + magenta  + yellow  = black

Subtractive color wheel

the subtractive color wheel

Magnify

more talk

  • optical, superposition: paints, dyes and pigments are reflective filters
  • spatial, small elements: halftone dots

Photograph of a four color printing press

A five color press: yellow, magenta, cyan, black, spot color.

historical junk

The painter's color wheel is a convenient way to understand how to mimic some colors by mixing red, yellow, and blue pigments. This does not make red, yellow, and blue the primary colors of the human visual system. They do not satisfy the definition of primary. They can't reproduce the widest variety of colors when combined. Cyan, magenta, and yellow have a greater chromatic range as evidenced by their ability to produce a reasonable black. No combination of red, yellow, and blue pigments will approach black as closely as do cyan, magenta, and yellow. The primary colors are red, green, and blue — not red, yellow, and blue.

Artist's color wheel

Magnify

more talk

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832), student of the arts, theatrical director, and author (Iphigenia at Taurus, Egmont, Faust). Lots of interesting descriptive information on the subjective nature of color, which many physicists of his day ignored, but does not propose a physical model of color.

The theory of colors, in particular, has suffered much, and its progress has been incalculably retarded by having been mixed up with optics generally, a science which cannot dispense with mathematics; whereas the theory of colors, in strictness, may be investigated quite independently of optics.

Colour is a law of nature in relation with the sense of sight… [It] is an elementary phenomenon in nature adapted to the sense of vision…

It is not light, in an abstract sense, but a luminous image that we have to consider.

Yellow, blue, and red, may be assumed as pure elementary colors, already existing; from these, violet, orange, and green, are the simplest combined results.

That all the colours mixed together produce white, is an absurdity which people have credulously been accustomed to repeat for a century, in opposition to the evidence of their senses.

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1810

Hmm. Alright then.

Now, as it is almost impossible to conceive each sensitive point of the retina to contain an infinite number of particles, each capable of vibrating in perfect unison with every possible undulation, it becomes necessary to suppose the number limited, for instance, to the three principal colours, red, yellow, and blue, of which the undulations are related in magnitude nearly as the numbers 8, 7, and 6; and that each of the particles is capable of being put in motion less or more forcibley by undulations differing less or more from a perfect unison; for instance the undulations of green light being nearly in the ratio of 6½, will affect equally the particles in unison with yellow and blue, and produce the same effect as a light composed of these two species: and each sensitive filament of the nerve may consist of three portions, one for each principal colour.

Thomas Young, 1802

color production

methods

  • emission
    • continuous spectra: hot stuff
      the Sun, fire, incandescent light bulbs
      incandescence
    • discrete spectra: excited electrons
      lasers, phosphors, fluorescent tubes, LEDs, neon tubes, sodium & mercury vapor lamps
      luminescence, fluorescence, phosphorescence (reemission)
  • reflection
    • opaque bodies
    • paints, inks, dyes, pigments
    • hemoglobin
    • chlorophyll a is bright blue-green and is twice as common as the olive colored chlorophyll b
    • carotenoids are yellow orange (carrots, squash, tomatoes) two kinds of carotenes have nutritional significance
    • anthocyanins provide the red purple blue color of red grapes, red cabbage, apples, radishes, eggplants
    • anthoxanthins pale yellow of potatoes, onions, cauliflower
  • transmission
    • transparent bodies
    • stained glass, photographic filters, tinted sunglasses, red sunsets
  • scattering
    • small suspended particles
    • nitrogen molecules make the sky blue
    • foam, froth, clouds, smoke
    • a colloid is a mixture of small particles of one substance suspendend in another substance: clouds, smoke, haze
      • emulsions are suspensions of one liquid in another: mayonnaise, cosmetic creams
        milk (fat globules 1–5 μm diameter reduced to < 1 μm after homogenization, micelles of milk protein casein 0.1 μm diameter)
      • gels are liquids dispersed in a solid: pudding is water dispersed in starch
      • sols are solids particles dispersed in a liquid: flour and cornstarch thickened sauces
  • dispersion
    • variations in transmission speed
    • rainbows, diamonds, flint glass, chromatic aberration
  • interference
    • path length differences
    • thin films, insect wings & shells, pigeon necks, peacock feathers, mother of pearl, heat stains on metals, spider webs, halos, bubbles, watered silks, mist on glass, photoelastic stress
    • iridescence, opalescence, pearlescence

color spaces

  • computer monitors
    • rgb
      bit depth number of colors a.k.a.
      8 28  = 256
      16 216  = 65,536 thousands of colors
      24 224  = 16,777,216 millions of colors
      32 232  = 4,294,967,296 billions of colors
    • hsb
  • television
    • YIQ: NTSC (US Canada, Mexico, Central America, Japan)
      • Y: luma, the "brightness", the "black and white" portion of the signal
      • In phase: blue-orange chroma
      • Quadrature (quadrature amplitude modulation): green-purple chroma
    • YUV: PAL (England, Western Europe, Asia, Australia), analog composite color video
      • Y: luma
      • U: blue-yellow chroma
      • V: red-cyan chroma
    • YDbDr: SECAM (France, former Eastern Bloc countries)
      • Y: luma
      • Db: différence bleue (B − Y)
      • Dr: différence rouge (R − Y)
    • YPbPr: analog component color video, "yipper"
      • Y: luma
      • Pb: primary blue (B − Y)
      • Pr: primary red (R − Y)
    • YCbCr: digital color video
      • Y: luma
      • Cb: chroma blue (B − Y)
      • Cr: chroma red (R − Y)
  • printing
    • cmy, cmyk, cmyk+spot
    • Hexachrome

No condition is permanent.

What Color Goes With Purple and Green

Source: https://physics.info/color/