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PANTONE 7551

PANTONE 7551

Parameters:
HEX Triplet:
#B88322
RGB:
184, 131, 34
CMYK:
0, 40, 96, 32
HSL:
39°, 82%, 72%
Closest colors:
in PANTONE:
PANTONE 1255
in RAL Classic:
RAL 1027
in RAL Design:
RAL 075 60 60
in RAL Effect:
RAL 320-M
What color is PANTONE 7551? The Great PANTONE 7551 Revolution: Nexia Steel and the Golden Print
2024-09-21 Snargl 02:10

What color is PANTONE 7551?

Yellow and black clock on a stand on a table with a black background. Color #B88322.
PANTONE 7551 color example: Man in a suit standing in the desert with a desert background
PANTONE 7551 is a shade of brown with a hint of orange.
It has a HEX code of #B88322, and RGB values of 184, 131, 34.
It has an approximate wavelength of 581.17 nm and a hue of 39°.
PANTONE 7551 can be used to create a warm, earthy, and natural feel in a design.

Example of the palette with the PANTONE 7551 color

Picture with primary colors of Smoky black, Light slate gray, Cafe noir, Copper and Peach puff
Top 5 color shades of the illustration. Arranged in descending order of frequency of occurrence (first - more often, last - more rare).
See these colors in NCS, PANTONE, RAL palettes...
Author:
Funny stories about the 'PANTONE 7551'

The Great PANTONE 7551 Revolution: Nexia Steel and the Golden Print

Once upon a time in the bustling city of Chromatonia, a place where colors were taken as seriously as gourmet cuisine, there was a rather peculiar event that would go down in history as the "Great PANTONE 7551 Revolution." This wasn't a political movement, nor a culinary fad, but rather an outrageous phenomenon in the world of polygraphy, led by an unlikely duo: Nexia Steel, a quirky art student with a penchant for eccentric ideas, and Scarlett Chanel, a world-famous top model known for her elegance, charisma, and irrational fear of pastel colors.

Nexia Steel was the kind of student who could turn even the most mundane project into something out of a Salvador Dalí dream. Her professors were used to her bringing in assignments that involved bizarre materials, like printing on leaves or creating business cards out of tofu. But one fateful day, while wandering through the university's cavernous supply closet, she stumbled upon a forgotten canister of PANTONE 7551, a golden mustard hue that seemed to shimmer with a life of its own.
Woman in a blue jacket and gold outfit standing next to a body of water with buildings in the background. Example of CMYK 0,40,96,32 color.

"PANTONE 7551?" she mused, squinting at the label. "Why does this sound like the code to a secret treasure?"

Nexia had an idea - an absolutely ludicrous one, but an idea nonetheless. She decided to use this mysterious color in her final project, a print ad that would feature none other than Scarlett Chanel. Little did she know that this small decision would change the course of Chromatonia's design industry forever.

Scarlett Chanel, meanwhile, was busy preparing for her next magazine cover shoot, completely unaware of the adventure she was about to embark on. Her life was a whirlwind of glamorous parties, photo shoots, and runway shows, all while avoiding any color that could be described as "vaguely pastel." When her manager told her about a request from a student named Nexia, who wanted to use her image for an "innovative project," Scarlett rolled her eyes but agreed, thinking it would be just another day in her fabulous life.

The day of the shoot arrived, and Nexia greeted Scarlett with a gleeful smile that bordered on maniacal. The model eyed the student warily. "This better not involve pink," Scarlett warned.

"Don't worry," Nexia replied, holding up a paintbrush dipped in PANTONE 7551. "This is going to be legendary!"
Painting of a landscape with a road going through the mountains and a sun setting in the distance over the horizon

As the photoshoot progressed, Nexia began applying PANTONE 7551 to everything - Scarlett's dress, her lipstick, even her hair. At first, the model protested, but when she saw the results on camera, she was stunned. The golden mustard hue didn't just look good; it looked divine. It was as if the color was made for her, accentuating her every feature in a way that no other shade had ever done before.

When the final prints were unveiled, the reaction was nothing short of pandemonium. The ad became an instant sensation. Designers, artists, and even politicians couldn't get enough of it. Everyone wanted to use PANTONE 7551 for their projects. Clothing lines were revamped, city billboards glowed with its golden sheen, and even the Mayor of Chromatonia declared it the official color of the year.

Scarlett Chanel's image became iconic, plastered across every surface in Chromatonia. She was hailed not only as the top model of the century but also as the "Golden Muse," while Nexia Steel was heralded as a visionary, the mastermind behind the revolutionary application of PANTONE 7551.

However, the sudden surge in demand for PANTONE 7551 caused a global shortage of the pigment. Artists began hoarding it, polygraphy studios went into bidding wars over the last remaining canisters, and underground markets for counterfeit PANTONE 7551 emerged. There were even rumors of a black market cartel run by artists-turned-smugglers, dealing exclusively in the golden hue.

Amidst the chaos, Nexia and Scarlett were enjoying their newfound fame, but they couldn't help but feel a little guilty about the pandemonium they had unleashed. In an effort to restore balance, Nexia proposed a solution: she would create a new color that could rival PANTONE 7551 - something so spectacular that people would forget about the golden hue entirely.

After weeks of mixing, matching, and testing, Nexia finally concocted a new shade: PANTONE 7552, a mesmerizing blend of teal and emerald with a hint of cosmic shimmer. The new color took Chromatonia by storm, and just like that, the obsession with PANTONE 7551 faded into history, replaced by a new craze.

And so, Nexia Steel and Scarlett Chanel returned to their lives, content in the knowledge that they had not only changed the face of polygraphy but also reminded the world that true creativity lies not just in the colors we choose, but in how we use them.
Author:

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