A homage to purple due to customer demand- that means you James

Welcome purple lovers to a page dedicated to the best colour ever

Firstly the history of the colour purple which i stole from somewhere

Purple is a precious colour associated with regal luxury because whilst fairly abundant in nature purple was for many milennia a difficult colour to produce in paint or dye. The first purple pigment was Tyrian purple, a dyestuff produced by the Phonecians in the city
of Tyre. This was around 2000 years ago, i think (will check - futher info welcomed). Tyre was
the great port of Phonecia, (modern Lebanon) a trading nation with outposts all across the known
world. Tyrian purple was produced from the shells of the concholepas mollusk "Chanque," and a
their purple pigment was a highly prized export. The dye gave a rich and deep purple that was
highly prized, and highly priced.

In medieval times, purple was a colour reserved for the powerful and wealthy - kings,
queens and bishops wore a lot of purple, whilst commoners had to make do with mucky grey and
poo brown. Purple pigment was still made from Mollusc shells, and mixing purple paint required
the artist or dyer to obtain vermillion (red) and ultramarine (blue) - which were also rare and
very expensive.

So purple was reserved for the powerful, with only blue and gold paint valued more highly,
(these were the traditional dominant colours of the madonna's robe, and the golden holy halos.
the bystanding kings wore purple, as do monarchs and senior religious figures today.)

It wasn't until 1856 that purple dye was synthesised, and could be cheaply produced.
William Henry Perkins was trying to synthesise quinine, (a medicine for malaria) and accidentally
produced the first chemical pigment. It happened to be purple, because purple is the bestest
colour.

At just 19 years old, Perkins left the Royal College of Chemistry to commercialise his
invention, and developed the new industry of synthetic dyes (he went on to develop colours other
than purple). He and other UK entrepeneurs initially dominated the market, but by the 1870s
chemical syestuffs were being produced and sold in greater numbers by German companies.

Edwardian fashions of the period were often in dull colours and blacks. Queen Victoria's
long mourning put Britain into a gloomy darkness, and revolution, pollution and opression were
reflected in the decades long trend for black.

But the new artificial pigments were gaining ground, and by the 1920s fashion designers like
Paul Poiret (influenced by the bright costumes of the Russian Ballet) were introducing vivid
colour into ladies fashions. Mass production and the growth of ready made fashions, along with
cheap synthetic dyes meant that purple clothing was finally becoming available to all. Sadly,
during the 1930s dusty grey sackcloth and ashes dominated the fashion scene, followed by khaki
uniforms in the early forties.

During the sixties, purple was a very groovy colour and "purple haze" a popular state of mind.
In the seventies, purple and green swirls were considered a delightful furnishing fabric. Prince
was probably the most prominant purple person in the 1980s, and purple and silver were all over
millenium shop windows.

Purple is a very bright and jolly colour, with a tonal range from lilac to mauve,
indigo to magenta, and hundreds of shades in between. Clint Boon, the excellent hammond organist,
ex of the inspiral carpets, sings "problem with the world today, not enough purple too much grey"
and who can disagree with an organist with a pudding bowl haircut and purple cordorouy flares?

Well done to mystery writer of above hstory and erm shall see you in court if you ever find this.

(I will deny everything)

A list of filsm with purple in the title What google thinks of purple

So in summary - there you go you asked for purple and you got it. Shame you didn't ask for something better really isn't it?

a purple cow, dissected. I don't know why

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