Who in the rainbow can draw the line where the violet tint ends and the orange tint begins? Distinctly we see the difference of the colors, but where exactly does the one first blendingly enter into the other? So with sanity and insanity.
—Herman Melville, Billy Budd
Orange, red? I don’t know what to believe anymore!
—Anonymous, Color Survey
I WILL EAT YOUR HEART WITH A FUCKING SPOON IF YOU AKS ANY MORE QUESTIONS ABOUT COLORS
—Anonymous, Color Survey
Thank you so much for all the help on the color survey. Over five million colors were named across 222,500 user sessions. If you never got around to taking it, it’s too late to contribute any data, but if you want you can see how it worked and take it for fun here.
First, a few basic discoveries:
- If you ask people to name colors long enough, they go totally crazy.
- “Puke” and “vomit” are totally real colors.
- Colorblind people are more likely than non-colorblind people to type “fuck this” (or some variant) and quit in frustration.
- Indigo was totally just added to the rainbow so it would have 7 colors and make that “ROY G. BIV” acronym work, just like you always suspected. It should really be ROY GBP, with maybe a C or T thrown in there between G and B depending on how the spectrum was converted to RGB.
- A couple dozen people embedded SQL ‘drop table’ statements in the color names. Nice try, kids.
- Nobody can spell “fuchsia”.
Overall, the results were really cool and a lot of fun to analyze. There are some basic limitations of this survey, which are discussed toward the bottom of this post. But the sheer amount of data here is cool.
Sex
By a strange coincidence, the same night I first made the color survey public, the webcomic Doghouse Diaries put up this comic (which I altered slightly to fit in this blog, click for original):
It was funny, but I realized I could test whether it was accurate (as far as chromosomal sex goes, anyway, which we asked about because it’s tied to colorblindness) [Note: For more on this distinction, see my follow-up post]. After the survey closed, I generated a version of the Doghouse Diaries comic with actual data, using the most frequent color name for the handful of colors in the survey closest to the ones in the comic:

Basically, women were slightly more liberal with the modifiers, but otherwise they generally agreed (and some of the differences may be sampling noise). The results were similar across the survey—men and women tended on average to call colors the same names.
So I was feeling pretty good about equality. Then I decided to calculate the ‘most masculine’ and ‘most feminine’ colors. I was looking for the color names most disproportionately popular among each group; that is, the names that the most women came up with compared to the fewest men (or vice versa).
Here are the color names most disproportionately popular among women:
- Dusty Teal
- Blush Pink
- Dusty Lavender
- Butter Yellow
- Dusky Rose
Okay, pretty flowery, certainly. Kind of an incense-bomb-set-off-in-a-Bed-Bath-&-Beyond vibe. Well, let’s take a look at the other list.
Here are the color names most disproportionately popular among men:
- Penis
- Gay
- WTF
- Dunno
- Baige
I … that’s not my typo in #5—the only actual color in the list really is a misspelling of “beige”. And keep in mind, this is based on the number of unique people who answered the color, not the number of times they typed it. This isn’t just the effect of a couple spammers. In fact, this is after the spamfilter.
I weep for my gender. But, on to:
RGB Values
Here are RGB values for the first 48 out of about a thousand colors whose RGB values (across the average monitor, shown on a white background) I was able to pin down with a fairly high degree of precision:

The full table of 954 colors is here, also available as a text file here (I have no opinion about whether it should be used to build a new X11 rgb.txt except that seems like the transition would be a huge headache.)
The RGB value for a name is based on the location in the RGB color space where there was the highest frequency of responses choosing that name. This was tricky to calculate. I tried simple geometric means (conceptually flawed), a brute force survey of all potential center points (too slow), and fitting kernel density functions (math is hard). In the end, I used the average of a bunch of runs of a stochastic hillclimbing algorithm. For mostly boring notes on my data handling for this list, see the comments at the bottom of the xkcd.com/color/rgb/ page.
Spelling and Spam
Spelling was an issue for a lot of users:

Now, you may notice that the correct spelling is missing. This is because I can’t spell it either, and when running the analysis, used Google’s suggestion feature as a spellchecker:

A friend pointed out that to spell it right, you can think of it as “fuck-sia” (“fuch-sia”).
Misspellings aside, a lot of people spammed the database, but there were some decent filters in place. I dropped out people who gave too many answers which weren’t colors used by many other people. I also looked at the variation in hue; if people gave the same answer repeatedly for colors of wildly varying hue, I threw out all their results. This mainly caught people who typed the same thing over and over. Some were obviously using scripts; based on the filter’s certainty, the #1 spammer in the database was someone who named 2,400 colors—all with the same racial slur.
Map
Here’s a map of color boundaries for a particular part of the RGB cube. The data here comes from a portion of the survey (1.5 million results) which sampled only this region and showed the colors against both black and white backgrounds.
The data for this chart is here (3.6 MB text file with each RGB triplet named). Despite some requests, I’m not planning to make a poster of any of this, since it seems wrong to take advantage of all this volunteer effort for a profit; I just wanted to see what the results looked like. You’re welcome to print one up yourself (huge copy here), but keep in mind that print color spaces are different from monitor ones.
Basic Issues
Of course, there are basic issues with this color survey. People are primed by the colors they saw previously, which adds overall noise and some biases to the data (although it all seemed to even out in the end). Moreover, monitors vary; RGB is not an absolute color space. Fortunately, what I’m really interested in is what colors will look like on a typical monitors, so most of this data is across the sample of all non-colorblind users on all types of monitors (>90% LCD, roughly 6% CRT).
Color is a really fascinating topic, especially since we’re taught so many different and often contradictory ideas about rainbows, different primary colors, and frequencies of light. If you want to understand it better, you might try the neat introduction in Chapter 35 ofThe Feynman Lectures on Physics (Vol. 1), read Charles Poynton’s Color FAQ, or just peruse links from the Wikipedia article on color. For the purposes of this survey, we’re working inside the RGB space of the average monitor, so this data is useful for picking and naming screen colors. And really, if you’re reading this blog, odds are you probably—like me—spend more time looking at a monitor than at the outdoors anyway.
Miscellaneous
Lastly, here are some assorted things people came up with while labeling colors:

Thank you so much to relsqui for writing the survey frontend, and to everyone else who sacrificed their eyeballs for this project. If you have ideas and want to analyze these results further, I’ve posted the raw data as an SQLite dump here (84 MB .tar.gz file). It’s been anonymized, with IPs, URLs, and emails removed. I also have GeoIP information; if you’d like to do geocorrelation of some kind, I’ll be providing a version of the data with basic region-level lat/long information (limited to protect privacy) sometime in the next few days. Note: The ColorDB data is the main survey. The SatOnly data is the supplementary survey covering only the RGB faces in the map, and was presented on a half-black half-white background.)
And, of course, if you do anything fun with this data, I’d love to see the results—let me know at xkcd@xkcd.com.


The link to take the test doesn’t work. 😦
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Color results of the survey was to see the color of a survey to see if there are gender differences, such as colors of people. The results are interesting and fun. Read the full article, except for the part with “name of the most popular color among men disproportionately.
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such as colors of people. The results are interesting and fun. Read the full article, except for the part with “name of the most popular color among men disproportionately
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If you want information about the color, see our Web Site Colors
among men disproportionately
thanks.
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I like the yellow shirt.
Against any remaining color.
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Bring the movie theater 3D experience home! VIZIO XVT3D650SV 65-Inch 3D LED LCD HDTV delivers stunning, cinema-style 3D. Whether you are watching the latest summer blockbuster or the championship game
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Really great insight. Thanks for sharing
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Hi! I’m at work surfing around your blog from my new iphone 4! Just wanted to say I love reading through your blog and look forward to all your posts! Carry on the outstanding work!
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This is the exact Precor AMT100i used in health and fitness clubs worldwide. Self-powered, does’t want to be plugged in. Integrated reading rack, accessories and water bottle holder. Titanium-colored frame, with Pacific blue gray covers and orange highlights
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The results are both interesting and hilarious. Read the whole post down to the part with “color names most disproportionately
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the full article, except for the part with “name of the most popular color among
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wonderfull color..good information thanks admin..
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Thanks for the good things to read.
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thanks a lot for good info
It make me clever than before
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This is the exact Precor AMT100i used in health and fitness clubs worldwide. Self-powered, does’t want to be plugged in. Thank so much
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I’m at work surfing around your blog from my new iphone 4! Just wanted to say
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he results are both interesting and hilarious. Read the whole post down to the part with “color names most disproportionately
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Thank you for your knowledge of color. I have written a blog about maclaren baby strollers as well to visit me at maclaren baby strollers
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Thank you for nice post. This is why I try and actually “walk” up to the person I need the answer, or help from, and engage in conversation. Amazing how much more obliging people are when you take the time to see them in person.
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color is so interesting,one book is good:bead’s color
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In 8th grade english we had a spelling bee, I got ‘fuchsia’ wrong. when the teacher spelled it out correctly, I said, but that would be fuck-sia! and only cued as to what I had said when the whole class erupted laughing.
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Interesting content!
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wonderful information.. I’m a man :d.. so felling more clever!!! 😀
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Funny and interesting (the best are “colors if you’re…” 😉
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“shark invested water blue”, haha, funny 🙂
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If you want information about the color, see our Web Site Colors
among men disproportionately
thanks.Best Selling Products
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Interesting : )
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Home business opportunity!
Thank fro you.
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It’s great to be able to take a color test :o)
Thanks for posting this
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Ok……Who else got linked here from TV tropes ! LOL.
Your milage may vary but i only go by the primary colours from red to blue, espically if they are in a skirt.
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I am very worried regarding our child who will be currently taking Metadate. I understand there are actually many side-effects. We are extremely worried they gets addicted to some other pills. Precisely what more may I implement? What type of program recommendation will you give me personally. I noticed this Dr. Weathers who does not use pills to take care of ADHD youngsters and their loved ones. Does anyone know anything about what he does? Have you read through this Dr’s books ADHD: a Path to Success along with ADHD: Drug free and Doing Fine
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Just to let you know that your results have been used without attribution at http://blog.kissmetrics.com/gender-and-color/#comment-4836
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I like cyan color.
when i look it.I think i look sky.
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One day my male friends had a problem about Crimson Tide movie, the “crimson” part actually. I Couldn’t find any crimson thing in the house to show him what does the color look like.
Something fairly helping came out – a simple tool, that can be found at http://fmcc.ania.cc/
I am not sure if the English version is helpfull in the same way as it is for Polish color names (they are more complicated, I guess), but this can be fixed any time. Feedback would be appreciated 😉
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@Jon: as folks replied on the other thread, the kissmetrics infographic ripped off Doghouse Diaries, not Mr. Munroe. As such, the item they included was entirely fictional, rather than based on any data whatsoever.
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Just coincidentally, I have been reading about color classification in language and culture. For an interesting explanation of how different cultures classify colors, please read the book Through the language glass : why the world looks different in other languages by Guy Deutscher. Turns out some cultures don’t feel many names are needed for colors; in fact, some cultures classify the color of the daytime sky as black. Fascinating stuff.
(Does anyone remember the book Science Made Stupid? In it, the risible spectrum colors were listed, and included taupe, ecru, mauve, and puce.)
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Doubt anyone’s still reading this, but in case anyone wants an “easy” way to remember how to spell fuchsia, here goes:
The flower was named after a German botanist named Fuchs – which, in German, means “fox” and is pronounced “foochs” (with a little aspiration in the final ch sound). Luckily for said botanist and his descendants, the German version of everyone’s favorite English expletive is “fick,” pronounced exactly as it looks.
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If you want information about the color, see our Web Site Colors
among men disproportionately
thanks.panasonic tc l32c12 32 lcd tv 720p
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Wish I’d known about this poll when it was active… I’d have avoided the whole fuchsia debacle by labeling everything magenta. Color theory, people!
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Who would have thought that a survey on colors can provide a lot of information about the thinking behind both sexes. It certainly made me look stupid…as a guy of course.
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You forgot that popular “guy” color, “titty pink”.
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Man, interesting. You can do science out of everything. Take a look at the google heat maps for example.
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ı love you black and white..
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Interesting to see the difference between the two.
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Just thought you might want to know stumbleupon’s facebook thing just sent me here. Pretty darn ace.
Any news on the geographical statistics?
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There’s no color named blood?
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