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Color:
Titanium


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Olive
Sycamore
Bile
Peridot
Sulfur
Dark khaki
Xanthic
Gentle Sage
Cadmium yellow
Lemon
Yellow
Sunny Yellow
Straw
Daffodil
Sallow
Dun
Alabaster
Soft Ivory
Lotion
Similar colors:
Stone
Dingy Gray
Old silver
Weathered Wood
Peat
Flint
Warm Gray
Smudge
Tarnished Silver
Overcast
Gentle Sage
Artichoke
Shadow
Lichen
Beech
Grullo
Sandstone
Cardamom
Shale
Latte
Dark tan
Bark Brown
Sage
Tundra
Faded Brown
Khaki  
Cloudy White
Limestone
Pebble
Dust
Words evoked by this color:
churchill,  frigate,  dreadnought,  warship,  priory,  manse,  abbey,  presbytery,  doric,  nat,  scarcity,  steinbeck,  wasteland,  megalithic,  cloistered,  minster,  palisade,  henge,  cloister,  amphitheater,  transept,  narthex,  coliseum,  buttress,  hadrian,  archway,  neolithic,  mesolithic,  neanderthal,  amphitheatre,  castillo,  balustrade,  acropolis,  hemp,  louche,  lingering,  blurred,  smuggle,  puffing,  mountbatten,  steely,  high-rise,  material,  erecting,  structural,  metropolis,  welding,  welded,  cathodic,  countersink
Literary analysis:
In literature, the term “titanium” is often invoked as a reference to a distinctive pigment rather than merely its elemental form. Writers have described its use in creating a range of rich tones—from the deep reds implied by red oxides (as seen in [1]) to the vibrant greens produced in combination with nickel, which yield unique green hues ([2]). In some practical discussions of dyeing techniques, titanium compounds, such as titanium-potassium lactate or oxalate, are noted for enhancing browns, yellows, deep reds, and yellow‐greens ([3]). Moreover, the specific naming of “Titanium Green” ([4]) underscores its established identity as an enduring and celebrated color in artistic and literary contexts.
  1. Red Oxide of Titanium —in Shelburne.
    — from American Journal of Science, Vol. 1. by Various
  2. Nickel and titanium also furnish green colours, but these are not in common use.
    — from Cooley's Cyclopædia of Practical Receipts and Collateral Information in the Arts, Manufactures, Professions, and Trades..., Sixth Edition, Volume I by Richard Vine Tuson
  3. For browns, yellows, deep reds, or yellow-greens, it is advantageous to use titanium-potassium lactate or oxalate (2 grm.
    — from The Principles of Leather Manufacture by H. R. (Henry Richardson) Procter
  4. Titanium Green, 290 .
    — from Field's Chromatography or Treatise on Colours and Pigments as Used by Artists by George Field


Colors associated with the word:
Silver 
Charcoal
Slate gray
Gunmetal
Pewter
Steel Gray
Ash gray
Graphite
Iron Gray
Platinum
Nickel
Smoke
Cloud Gray
Mist
Stone Gray
Words with similar colors:
retort,  bevel,  metastable,  acuity,  sly,  articulation,  circuitous,  fine-tune,  turing,  meticulously,  runic,  modernity,  modernization,  moderne,  howled,  modernizing,  modernize,  incredulously,  slyly,  lunacy
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This tab, the new OneLook "color thesaurus", is a work in progress. It draws from a data set of more than 2000 color names gathered from sources around the Web, and an analysis of how they are referenced in English texts. Some words, like "peach", function as both a color name and an object; when you do a search for words like these, you will see both of the above sections.



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