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						 ISCC-NBS Dictionary of Color Names
						 
						
						The ISCC-NBS System of Color Designation is a system for naming colors based on
						a set of 12 basic color terms and a small set of adjective modifiers. It was
						first established in the 1930s by a joint effort of the Inter-Society Color
						Council, made up of delegates from various American trade organizations, and
						the National Bureau of Standards, a US government agency. As suggested in 1932
						by the first chairman of the ISCC, the system's goal is to be "a means of
						designating colors in the United States Pharmacopoeia, in the National
						Formulary, and in general literature ... such designation to be sufficiently
						standardized as to be acceptable and usable by science, sufficiently broad to
						be appreciated and used by science, art, and industry, and sufficiently
						commonplace to be understood, at least in a general way, by the whole public."
						The system aims to provide a basis on which color definitions in fields from
						fashion and printing to botany and geology can be systematized and regularized,
						so that each industry need not invent its own incompatible color system.
						 
						 
						In 1939, the system's approach was published in the Journal of Research of the
						National Bureau of Standards, and the ISCC formally approved the system, which
						consisted of a set of blocks within the color space defined by the Munsell
						color system as embodied by the Munsell Book of Color. Over the following
						decades the ISCC-NBS system's boundaries were tweaked and its relation to
						various other color standards were defined, including for instance those for
						plastics, building materials, botany, paint, and soil. After the definition of
						the Munsell system was slightly altered by its 1943 renotation, the ISCC-NBS
						system was redefined in the 1950s in relation to the new Munsell coordinates.
						In 1955, the NBS published The Color Names Dictionary, which cross-referenced
						terms from several other color systems and dictionaries, relating them to the
						ISCC-NBS system and thereby to each other. In 1965, the NBS published Centroid
						Color Charts made up of color samples demonstrating the central color in each
						category, as a physical representation of the system usable by the public, and
						also published The Universal Color Language, a more general system for color
						designation with various degrees of precision from completely generic (13 broad
						categories) to extremely precise (numeric values from spectrophotometric
						measurement). In 1976, The Color Names Dictionary and The Universal Color
						Language were combined and updated with the publication of Color: Universal
						Language and Dictionary of Names, the definitive source on the ISCC-NBS system.
						 
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