Talk:Stains: Difference between revisions

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I don't know of any precedent or justification for including stains beyond tenne, sanguine or murrey; the others are just very unusual colours, usually of later vintage than those typically given. --[[User:Daniel C. Boyer|Daniel C. Boyer]] 10:24, 12 Dec 2005 (CST)
I don't know of any precedent or justification for including stains beyond tenne, sanguine or murrey; the others are just very unusual colours, usually of later vintage than those typically given. --[[User:Daniel C. Boyer|Daniel C. Boyer]] 10:24, 12 Dec 2005 (CST)

:My understanding of the other stains is that they were used in Continental heraldry. [[User:Conrad Leviston|Conrad Leviston]] 19:30, 13 Dec 2005 (CST)

::But they are not and never have been classified as "stains"! Sure, until very recent times (World War II in the case of Bleu Celeste, which for some reason caused it to surge in popularity) they had only very rare occurence in Continental history and no, if any, occurence in England or Scotland, but they were always recognised (if they were recongised as tinctures at all; some have still not been recognised outside a very narrow framework, as e.g. Rose which is a 1997 innovation of the Canadian Heraldic Authority and has not been recognised elsewhere) as colours, not stains, in period (to the extent that they existed therein, which some did not) as well as today. --[[User:Daniel C. Boyer|Daniel C. Boyer]] 14:22, 15 Dec 2005 (CST)

Latest revision as of 07:22, 16 December 2005

I don't know of any precedent or justification for including stains beyond tenne, sanguine or murrey; the others are just very unusual colours, usually of later vintage than those typically given. --Daniel C. Boyer 10:24, 12 Dec 2005 (CST)

My understanding of the other stains is that they were used in Continental heraldry. Conrad Leviston 19:30, 13 Dec 2005 (CST)
But they are not and never have been classified as "stains"! Sure, until very recent times (World War II in the case of Bleu Celeste, which for some reason caused it to surge in popularity) they had only very rare occurence in Continental history and no, if any, occurence in England or Scotland, but they were always recognised (if they were recongised as tinctures at all; some have still not been recognised outside a very narrow framework, as e.g. Rose which is a 1997 innovation of the Canadian Heraldic Authority and has not been recognised elsewhere) as colours, not stains, in period (to the extent that they existed therein, which some did not) as well as today. --Daniel C. Boyer 14:22, 15 Dec 2005 (CST)