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  2. Three Colours: Red - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Colours:_Red

    Three Colours: Red (French: Trois couleurs: Rouge, Polish: Trzy kolory: Czerwony) is a 1994 drama film co-written, produced and directed by Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski. It is the final installment of the Three Colours trilogy , which examines the French Revolutionary ideals ; it is preceded by Blue and then by White .

  3. Three Colours trilogy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Colours_trilogy

    Blue, white, and red are the colours of the French flag in hoist-to-fly order, and the story of each film is loosely based on one of the three political ideals in the motto of the French Republic: liberty, equality, fraternity. As with the treatment of the Ten Commandments in Dekalog, the illustration of these principles is often ambiguous and ...

  4. Oxblood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxblood

    Small 18th-century vase with sang de boeuf glaze. Oxblood or ox-blood is a dark shade of red.It resembles burgundy, but has less purple and more dark brown hues.The French term sang-de-bœuf, or sang de bœuf, with the same meaning (but also "ox blood") is used in various contexts in English, [3] but especially in pottery, where sang de boeuf glaze in the color is a classic ceramic glaze in ...

  5. Shades of red - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shades_of_red

    The color poppy red is named after the poppy flower. Poppy red is a shade of pink-red. [8] Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae, a Canadian officer and surgeon in World War I, wrote possibly history's most famous wartime poem, called "In Flanders Fields", written in 1915. [9]

  6. Red - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red

    Countries with red on their flags; the shades of red correspond to those on their respective flags. Red is the most common color found in national flags, found on the flags of 77 percent of the 210 countries listed as independent in 2016; far ahead of white (58 percent); green (40 percent) and blue (37 percent). [94]

  7. Coquelicot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coquelicot

    Coquelicot ( / ˈ k oʊ k l ɪ k oʊ / KOHK-li-koh) is a shade of red. The term is originally the French name for the wild corn poppy, Papaver rhoeas, which is distinguished by its bright red color and orange tint. [2] It eventually passed into English usage as the name of a color based upon that of the flower.

  8. Vermilion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vermilion

    The shade of the color can vary from dark to light depending upon how the pigment is made and how the lacquer was applied. Chinese red was originally made from the powdered mineral cinnabar, but beginning in about the 8th century it was made more commonly by a chemical process combining mercury and sulfur.

  9. Maroon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maroon

    Maroon (US/UK / m ə ˈ r uː n / mə-ROON, [2] Australia / m ə ˈ r oʊ n / mə-ROHN [3]) is a brownish crimson color that takes its name from the French word marron, meaning chestnut. [4] Marron is also one of the French translations for "brown". Terms describing interchangeable shades, with overlapping RGB ranges, include burgundy, claret ...