Colors with Undefined Names
32. Gamboge Color 388 - #E49B0F
Gamboge is a partially transparent deep saffron to mustard yellow pigment. It
is used to dye Buddhist monks' robes because the color is a deep tone of
saffron, the traditional color used for the robes of Theravada Buddhist
monks.
Gamboge is most often extracted by tapping resin (sometimes incorrectly
referred to as sap) from various species of evergreen trees of the family
Guttiferae (also known as Clusiaceae). The tree most commonly used is the
gamboge tree (genus Garcinia). The orange fruit of Garcinia gummi-gutta
(formerly called G. cambogia) is also known as gamboge or gambooge.
The trees must be at least ten years old before they are tapped. The resin
is extracted by making spiral incisions in the bark, and by breaking off leaves
and shoots and letting the milky yellow resinous gum drip out. The resulting
latex is collected in hollow bamboo canes. After the resin is congealed, the
bamboo is broken away and large rods of raw gamboge remain.
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