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Mauve: how one man invented a colour that changed the world
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Abstract
"MAUVE is the story of a man who accidentally invented a color, and in the process transformed the world around him. Before 1856, the color in our lives--the reds, blues, and blacks of clothing, paint, print--came from insects or mollusks, roots or leaves, and dyeing was painstaking and expensive. But in 1856 eighteeen-year-old English chemist William Perkin accidentally discovered a way to mass-produce color in a factory. Working on a treament for malaria in his London home laboratory, Perkin found mauve by chance. His experiments failed to result in artificial quinine as he had hoped, but produced instead a dark oily sludge that happened to turn silk a beautiful light purple."
Contents
The celebrity -- Not the land of science -- Floating in the air -- The recipe -- Hindrance and synthesis -- Mauve measles -- The terrible glare -- Madder -- Poisoning the clientele -- Red letter days -- Self-destruction -- The new eventuality -- Physical acts -- Fingerprints.
Publisher
Publication
London: Faber and Faber, 2000
Year
Is about
Person
Subject
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 0571201970
- 9780571201976
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