: Origin of the color red in early typography? A lot of (early) printing is done in black and red. The red is mostly used as accent color. What is the origin of this red? Does is have a
A lot of (early) printing is done in black and red. The red is mostly used as accent color.
What is the origin of this red? Does is have a name and/or specification?
Image source: Museum Meermanno
UPDATE:
I know it's a strong color scheme. I wan't to know what the exact color is and the reason why early printers picked this particular color. I'm also interested in the properties of the ink. What it is made of. Also if it is always the same red.
The example I gave is by Fust and Schoeffer, printing completed in 1459. A few year earlier, Fust loaned Gutenberg money to print his bible.
I realise that these early works inspired many. I guess Gutenberg red is the reference point. But if some other publication has more influence on this 'typographic color scheme', than I would like to know who, what and why.
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In medieval times, it would likely have been red lead (lead tetroxide). This red-orange pigment could be cheaply produced by roasting white lead.
The Romans called this stuff minium. (But they used the same word to refer to the more expensive pigment made from cinnabar).
Not a scientific answer, but Roger Black was famous for the white/black/red combo in a lot of his design. He had 10 rules of design and 2, 3, and 4 were:
The First Color is White,
The Second Color is Black, The Third Color is Red
Calligraphers and early printers grasped this over 500 years ago, and
experience has proved them exactly right.
On the web, white is every color firing at full strength; it's the brightest
color. Black holds the highest contrast to white, and so it is the first choice
for type set on a white background. Red (not blue or yellow) works well with
both.
So from an aesthetic view, red works very well as a highlight color with both white (paper) and black (text).
And as you can see, this goes way back in history. From the Medieval manuscripts and Chinese calligraphy to name just a few.
If you pinpoint a region and time period, then you probably will be better at guessing what the exact pigment was. Long time ago travelling was expensive or merely impossible, so inventions were usually created in parallel in more than one place or replicated to avoid the need of importing and exporting goods.
For example these are two medieval sources of red pigment: mercuric sulphide and vermilion, which are very similar in colour, or so I read.
Mercuric sulphide can be found naturally in Spain, close to Sienna. Vermilion, on the other hand, is a man made version of mercuric sulphide (trivia: it was poisonous).
Manuscripts made in Spain probably used natural mercuric sulphide, but the ones made far from Spain probably used vermilion, because they could not find the natural pigment.
You mentioned "prints" in your question, though, so are you specifically referring to documents created with a press, so circa 1400? Take a look at @Yorik 's comment below.
Red Ochre has been in use since the Neanderthals. It's readily available and understood.
Red ochers are among the most widely used pigments. They can be traced back to the earliest cave paintings. Red ocher can be found in natural form in volcanic regions or can be produced by heating yellow ocher. There are many variations or red ocher: a light, warn tone is Venetian Red, darker, more cool-toned purple versions is called Indian Red, or Caput Mortuum. The choicest source for red ochre in classical antiquity was known as Pontus Euxinus, from the Pontine city of Sinope, according to Pliny. The coloring agent of al these pigments is iron oxide. Although there are many shades of red ocher they all appear subdued when compared to vermillion. Red ocher is very opaque and absorbs much oil.
Medieval and Renaissance painters used red ocher for fresco, tempera and oil painting. It was also used for drawing. It mixes well with other colors and produces a great variety of natural shades.
Source: Essential Vermeer
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