300 years before Pantone

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In 1692 an artist known only as “A. Boogert” sat down to write a book in Dutch about mixing watercolors. Not only would he begin the book with a bit about the use of color in painting, but would go on to explain how to create certain hues and change the tone by adding one, two, or three parts of water. The premise sounds simple enough, but the final product is almost unfathomable in its detail and scope.

It’s hard not to compare the hundreds of pages of colour to its contemporary equivalent, the Pantone Color Guide, which wouldn’t be published for the first time until 1963.