Shades of green: how many do you know? Discover these 17 shades that we have chosen for you

Behind every color there is a world to tell and the shades of green that we have selected for you will be full of interesting ideas to discover and explore. One of the most loved colors everwhen you think of green you automatically think of nature: plants, stones and fruits are characterized by many shades of this colour, from the most lively and brilliant to the darkest and coldest, sometimes gloomy. All attributable to natural contexts that surround us every day and which, according to psychology, possess a strong power anti-stress.

But by looking closely at the world of greens, it is easy to realize that there are many more, that it is not just a pea, apple or meadow green, but that there are very special shades, sometimes difficult to define, which make part of this immense family.

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This is why we have selected for you 17 shades of green which deserve to be discovered and known and which boast a very long history, even millennia, which is worth hearing. Find out below.

Celadon

Celadon green

Celadon ceramic vases.

sweet song

Clear and translucent shade, the green celadon owes its name to a type of oriental ceramic widespread in Korea already before the year 1000. Its color derives from the small quantity of iron oxide that is released during the firing of the glass but the name derives from the costume of a character in a novel seventeenth century, The Astrea of Honoré d’Urfé, the Céladon shepherd, characterized by light green ribbons.

Sage

Close up on a sage plant.

Close up on a sage plant.

Catherine McQueen

Sage green owes its name to the plant of the same name and is a greyish green variant. For this reason in English, this color is often called grey-green. It is considered a relaxing color, capable of transmitting peace and calm, which is why it is often used in domestic environments.

Chartreuse

A glass of Chartreuse liqueur.

A glass of Chartreuse liqueur.

AlexPro9500

The green chartreuse it derives from the green-yellow liqueur of the same name born in 1605 in the Vauvert Abbey, near Paris. The name, in Italian Carthusian, derives from the Carthusian monks who created it and defined it as a true one elixir long-lived. Characterized by a strong but very sweet taste, it was marketed only two centuries later.

Lime

lime green

Lime slices.

The Washington Post/Getty Images

Close to color chartreuse but brighter and greener, lime green takes its name from the citrus fruit of the same name and is usually represented in a more lively and electricsometimes neon. Despite its very contemporary appearance, it was defined and cataloged as a color already at the beginning of the twentieth century.

Military

military green color

Some US Army soldiers.

Erik S. Lesser/Getty Images

The military green it is the typical color of soldiers’ uniforms and is used all over the world for the purpose of camouflage during missions. What makes it particular, compared to other greens, is the yellowish tone, similar to that of green olives. For this reason it is often compared to olive green.

Jade

jade green color

A natural jade stone.

Luen Wantisud

Intense, similar to emerald but more delicate and rich in iridescent reflections, jade green owes its name to the homonymous stone which has been used in China for over 5000 years. Considered a lucky stone, it is also used for the creation of furnishings, jewelry and jewelry which take on a lighter shade almost similar to a celadon green.

Emerald

emerald green

Emerald green mineral.

VvoeVale

Brilliant and luminous, emerald green owes its name to the stone, much loved in the goldsmith sector. It is one of the oldest and most historic colors, although with different and sometimes conflicting interpretations. In the times of the ancient Egyptians it came Widely used in paintingan area in which it embodied positive meanings such as fertility, fecundity and regeneration but during Christianity it was long considered an evil color.

Verdigris

statue of liberty verdigris

A view of the Statue of Liberty.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

The term verdigris refers to a detail greenish pigment which forms naturally on copper (but also on brass and bronze) due to a chemical reaction due to exposure to oxidizing agents such as air and sea water. Also replicable using acetic acid on copper plates, it was already used in ancient Greece as a pigment in paint and has greyish shades.

Persian

A copy of the Quran with a green cover.

A copy of the Quran with a green cover.

Mansoreh Motamedi

Green is a sacred color for Islama color that returns in various shades, some more similar to a green lawn, and which is intended to represent paradise (intended precisely as a garden with a brilliant tone of green). This, in particular, is a shade called Persian green, and owes its name to the ceramics produced in those lands, green due to the presence of malachite inside them.

Paris green

green of paris monet painting

The painting Bridge over the water lily pond, green harmony by Claude Monet.

The Paris green it is an intense, light and shiny green colour, much loved at the end of the nineteenth century by painters such as Claude Monet and Vincent Van Gogh. It owes its name to the rat poison that was used in the same period in the city: a concoction containing arsenic, an element that made this color highly toxic but did not dissuade the great painters from the idea of ​​using it

Lawn

green meadow

A green lawn.

Abhishek Mehta

Lively and brilliant, it is the typical color of meadows in the spring season, as well as the classic tone of green obtained by mixing the two primaries, yellow and blue.

Chlorophyll

chlorophyll green

Close-up of a leaf of a tropical plant.

Zen Rial

Shiny and alive, the green called with the term chlorophyll is that color that we observe on the leaves of plants. The molecule of the same name contained in plants and an essential element for the photosynthesis process, gives us this color because it is able to absorb all those of the visible spectrum with the exception of green.

Veronese green

Paolo Veronese painting Veronese green

The painting The Wedding at Cana by Paolo Veronese, 1528-1588.

Heritage Images/Getty Images

Veronese green is a tone of green that owes its name to Paolo Caliari, known as Veronese, a famous painter of the Italian Renaissance. It is an intense shade, which changes from emerald to jade green while remaining very bright and lively.

English Green

English green

A vintage English car dating back to 1955.

Heritage Images/Getty Images

If you have read our focus on the color red you will know about the existence of a specific color for racing car. If Italy was assigned red by convention, England got green. Dark, intense and elegant, if you think about it it is still a very widespread color and is a color very present in the fleet of English royals.

Forest

view of a forest

View of a mountain forest

Andrey Danilovich

There are various types of forests but the one in question, the one that defines this color, is one mountain forestdark but not gloomy, with a bright and intense touch. It is often used in interior design, especially in combination with wood for a finish elegant.

Tea leaf

teal green color

Example of teal color.

Jackyenjoyphotography

This bluish-tinged green is called tea leaf, referring to the coloring of some parts of the tea plant’s leaves. Its success is actually due to a totally different context: with the name of teal it is indeed one of the top 16 web colors formulated in 1987 and subsequently became one of the default background colors of Windows 95.

Octanium

teal

Species of duck with teal-colored plumage.

vencavolrab

Teal is not an easy color to define. It is assimilated to petrol greena special shade that this viscous liquid from which different types of fuel are extracted takes on, but contains a more bluish tinge. Its name, however, owes it to octane, a methane hydrocarbon characterized by a color that mix blue and green. This is a rather recent color, as it only appeared in the fashion world in the 1950s.

Source: Vanity Fair

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