The Neathbow: Difference between revisions

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<blockquote>''"A book for children. One page is devoted to each of the colours of the Neath, which are not found on the Surface."''<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.gamepedia.com/THE_NEATHBOW|THE NEATHBOW|Sunless Sea|}}</ref></blockquote>{{Object|image1=<gallery>
<blockquote>''"A book for children. One page is devoted to each of the colours of the Neath, which are not found on the Surface."''<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.gamepedia.com/THE_NEATHBOW|THE NEATHBOW|Sunless Sea|}}</ref></blockquote>{{Object|image1=prism.png|
prism.png | Prism
Neathbowcirclepaint2.png | Additive; artwork by MidnightVoyager
Neathbowcirclesubpaint2.png | Subtractive; artwork by MidnightVoyager
</gallery>|
location = [[The Neath]]<br>[[The High Wilderness]]<br>[[Parabola]]|
location = [[The Neath]]<br>[[The High Wilderness]]<br>[[Parabola]]|
related = [[Irrigo]]<br>[[Violant]]<br>[[Cosmogone]]<br>[[Peligin]]<br>[[Apocyan]]<br>[[Viric]]<br>[[Gant]]}}
related = [[Irrigo]]<br>[[Violant]]<br>[[Cosmogone]]<br>[[Peligin]]<br>[[Apocyan]]<br>[[Viric]]<br>[[Gant]]}}
'''The Neathbow''' is the collective term for seven colors which cannot be seen on [[the Surface]]. They are most commonly observed in the Neath (hence the name), but they also turn up in places like [[Parabola]]<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Parabola_tattoo|Parabola tattoo|Fallen London|}}</ref> and [[the High Wilderness]].<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Stair_to_the_Sea|The Stair to the Sea|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> The seven colors of the Neathbow are '''[[irrigo]]''', '''[[violant]]''', '''[[cosmogone]]''', '''[[peligin]]''', '''[[apocyan]]''', '''[[viric]]''', and '''[[gant]]'''.  
'''The Neathbow''' is the collective term for seven colors which cannot be seen on [[the Surface]]. They are most commonly observed in the Neath (hence the name), but they also turn up in places like [[Parabola]]<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Parabola_tattoo|Parabola tattoo|Fallen London|}}</ref> and [[the High Wilderness]].<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.gamepedia.com/The_Stair_to_the_Sea|The Stair to the Sea|Sunless Skies|}}</ref> The seven colors of the Neathbow are '''[[irrigo]]''', '''[[violant]]''', '''[[cosmogone]]''', '''[[peligin]]''', '''[[apocyan]]''', '''[[viric]]''', and '''[[gant]]'''.  


==Fireworks==
==Origins==
{{major spoiler small}}
 
Fireworks featuring the Neathbow are occasionally lit during the [[Feast of the Exceptional Rose]] to celebrate the occasion.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Arrange_a_Explosion_of_Neath-Colours_on_the_Stroke_of_Midnight_(40_FATE)|Arrange a Explosion of Neath-Colours on the Stroke of Midnight (40 FATE)|Fallen London|}} <blockquote>''"...violant [...] to ensure they'll think of you. Irrigo, to dull their memory of harder times. [...] viric, for lassitude. Finally [...] gant to show the depth of your feeling."''</ref></blockquote>
The Neathbow was likely inspired by real-life [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impossible_color impossible colors]. The shades of the Neathbow are likely inspired by the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Additive_color additive] (used for light) and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subtractive_color subtractive] (used for pigments) color wheels. Below are fanarts of the Neathbow arranged to correspond with those color wheels:
*Irrigo fireworks can help dull memories of hard times.
 
*Violant fireworks are hard to forget.
<gallery>
*Viric fireworks induce lassitude.
File:Neathbowcirclepaint2.png|Additive. Art by MidnightVoyager
*Gant fireworks show depth of feeling - grandiose but a bit arrogant.
File:Neathbowcirclesubpaint2.png|Subtractive. Art by MidnightVoyager
</gallery>
 
Each color's name likely has the following inspiration:
*"Irrigo" is a Latin word meaning to flood or overwhelm, or to diffuse or shed
*"Violant" may stem from "violent" and "violet"
*"Cosmogone" stems from "cosmogony", the study of the origins of the solar system, and "cosmos" and "gone"
*"Peligin" is seemingly a portmanteau of the Latin pelagus, meaning "sea," and the color fuligin. Fuligin, in turn, is darker than black, and is derived from the English word "fuliginous" meaning soot-like; this color was used by Gene Wolfe in his science fiction novel ''The Shadow of the Torturer''.
*"Apocyan" presumably derives from the color cyan, which has a similar hue, and the Greek prefix apo-, meaning something between "off, away" and "descended from" - like the words "apostate" (gone-away-from-a-cause) or "apocalypse" (un-covering).
*"Viric" probably comes from the Latin viridis, meaning "green, blooming, vigorous," a word that also spawned the name of the similar color viridian.


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:Other Things of Significance]]
[[Category:Other Things of Significance]]

Revision as of 16:48, 19 May 2023

"A book for children. One page is devoted to each of the colours of the Neath, which are not found on the Surface."[1]

The Neathbow is the collective term for seven colors which cannot be seen on the Surface. They are most commonly observed in the Neath (hence the name), but they also turn up in places like Parabola[2] and the High Wilderness.[3] The seven colors of the Neathbow are irrigo, violant, cosmogone, peligin, apocyan, viric, and gant.

Origins

The Neathbow was likely inspired by real-life impossible colors. The shades of the Neathbow are likely inspired by the additive (used for light) and subtractive (used for pigments) color wheels. Below are fanarts of the Neathbow arranged to correspond with those color wheels:

Each color's name likely has the following inspiration:

  • "Irrigo" is a Latin word meaning to flood or overwhelm, or to diffuse or shed
  • "Violant" may stem from "violent" and "violet"
  • "Cosmogone" stems from "cosmogony", the study of the origins of the solar system, and "cosmos" and "gone"
  • "Peligin" is seemingly a portmanteau of the Latin pelagus, meaning "sea," and the color fuligin. Fuligin, in turn, is darker than black, and is derived from the English word "fuliginous" meaning soot-like; this color was used by Gene Wolfe in his science fiction novel The Shadow of the Torturer.
  • "Apocyan" presumably derives from the color cyan, which has a similar hue, and the Greek prefix apo-, meaning something between "off, away" and "descended from" - like the words "apostate" (gone-away-from-a-cause) or "apocalypse" (un-covering).
  • "Viric" probably comes from the Latin viridis, meaning "green, blooming, vigorous," a word that also spawned the name of the similar color viridian.

References