Remember when I wouldn't stop talking about color, and you thought my posts would never end? Well, you were right. But with the latest announcement of 210 new colors from Pantone, the Be-All-End-All Final Word on All Things Color (or so they seem to claim), can you blame me? Of the approximately 10 million colors the human eye can see, the 52-year-old company has named, numbered, printed, collated, and collected a total of 2,310 colors including the newest additions. A drop in the proverbial bucket to be sure, but impressive when you consider the level of standardization they must achieve in order to standardize these colors. The highly consumable formats -- cards, swatches, folders, books, etc. -- are used by fashion and interior designers (and many others) to quickly and accurately describe colors.
Many of the new shades are intensified versions of familiar faces, with major expansion in the pink and orange categories. I sense a lean toward the exotic, with lots of richness and food-relevant hues that play well both with each other and as standouts with a neutral. Credit is given to the worldly and well-traveled Pantone creative team -- and they do indeed spend time in countries around the globe, noting the color trends in food, fashion, and even technology. However, I'd like to think that a more globalized palette is simply long overdue in such a connected and visually-focused age. These beautiful new additions simply reflect a more complete view of the world as we see it.
As a kid who came of age in what I call the Crayola era, I grew up surrounded by such delicious-sounding color names as "macaroni and cheese", "wild blue yonder", and "razzmatazz". Anything called "pink flamingo" or "fuzzy wuzzy" was just irresistible to me, and I pleaded for box after specialty box as much for the creative names as the vivid colors and gently pointed tips each new set would bring. The colors could transport me to favorite book settings and faraway places long before I later traveled there myself.
These days, the Pantone colors will set you back a bit more than your average ten-year-old's allowance. It's worth noting that these two prismatic powerhouses have never officially collaborated, though many color-savvy stylists will often reference both names of a similar color in order to evoke just the right shade. But perhaps, like a page from a coloring book, this newly-expanded array of colors will carry you away to a favorite childhood memory... or even a whole new destination, right from the comfort of your living room.