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Carnation (heraldry)

Heraldic tincture From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carnation (heraldry)
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In heraldry, carnation is a tincture, the name for skin colour,[1][2] more exactly the colour of pale or European human skin[3] (i.e., pale pinkish orange).

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Carnation tincture
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Coat of arms of Lavoûte-Chilhac, France: D'argent à la main de carnation tenant une croix de sable. (Argent, a hand carnation holding a cross sable)

It is rare in coats of arms in Anglophone countries but quite frequent on the European continent, in France in particular, derived from widespread use in German heraldry.[citation needed] In its rare appearances in Anglophone armory; it is not only used for European flesh tones, as in a crown rayonny or supported by two cubit arms, dexter carnation, sinister skeletal proper (crest of The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists)[4] but is also used for a general pink colouring as in a horse passant argent bridled saddled and trappings or, on its head a plume of three feathers carnation (crest of The Worshipful Company of Saddlers, England).[5]

Examples of carnation
         
Hex #F7DCC7 #FFD1B7 #FBC5A7 #FFBA96 #F4AB82
CMYK (0, 10, 15, 0) (0, 18, 28, 0) (0, 20, 25, 0) (0, 27, 41, 0) (0, 30, 47, 0)
RGB (247, 220, 199) (255, 209, 183) (251, 197, 167) (255, 186, 150) (244, 171, 130)
HSV (26°, 19%, 97%) (24°, 28%, 100%) (21°, 33%, 98%) (26°, 40%, 98%) (24°, 47%, 96%)
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References

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