Crimson (NR4) is produced using the dried bodies of a
scale insect,
Kermes, which were gathered commercially in Mediterranean countries, where they live on the
kermes oak, and sold throughout Europe. Kermes dyes have been found in burial wrappings in
Anglo-Scandinavian York. They fell out of use with the introduction of
carmine, also made from scale insects, because although the dyes were comparable in quality and color intensity, ten to twelve times as much kermes is needed to produce the same effect as carmine.
Carmine is a slightly different shade of red, extracted from a different insect (female
cochineal), although these denominations are sometimes confused or exchanged on purpose. Cochineal appears to have been brought to Europe by the Spaniard
Hernán Cortés during the
conquest of the Aztec Empire and the name 'carmine' is derived from the French
carmin. It was first described by
Pietro Andrea Mattioli in 1549. The pigment is also called
cochineal after the insect from which it is made. Alizarin crimson was invented in 1868.
Alizarin (PR83) is a pigment that was first synthesized in 1868 by the German
chemists
Carl Gräbe and
Carl Liebermann and replaced the natural pigment
madder lake. Alizarin crimson is a dye bonded onto
alum which is then used as a pigment and mixed with
ochre,
sienna and
umber. It is not totally colorfast. Several historical
color models have described crimson as a basic color: •
Aristotle listed as one of the basic colors, which is customarily translated as crimson. He described it as having
harmony with the color
purple in his
Sense and Sensibilia. • The 1708 edition of
Traité de la Peinture en Mignature listed crimson red as a
secondary color made up of red and blue, which is used to create other colors. It is listed alongside fire red, which mixes red and yellow. • Entomologist
Ignaz Schiffermüller included crimson red in his 12-color
color wheel in 1772. He placed it between red and violet red, with fire red included on the other side of red. • Physicist
Thomas Young listed crimson as one of seven basic colors in 1807, distinguishing it from red. • Printing technologist
Frederic Eugene Ives defined the color as the opposite of green in 1902, naming it "minus green". • Art historian
Arthur Upham Pope described alizarine crimson as well as
rose madder as the ideal pigment for a basic red in 1929. ==Etymology==