Several years ago, I painted a bathroom in my house a rich, smoky blue. Everyone who sees it asks for the color name. When I answer, “Benjamin Moore’s Gentleman’s Gray,” the questioner inevitably looks perplexed and assumes I have conflated two colors, because there is nothing gray about the shade. Even on Benjamin Moore’s website, the color is described as a “blackened blue” that “leans toward classic navy.” Why did the company choose a somewhat misleading name?
The name, though not entirely descriptive of the color, does conjure the image of a man impeccably dressed in a tailored three-piece suit — an image that aptly matches the richness of the hue. Hannah Yeo, Benjamin Moore’s color and design expert, says names play an important role when people are making color selections. “While color descriptions such as ‘light blue’ are helpful to narrow down colors and are quite straightforward, we also look for names that evoke positive associations, experiences, and are inspiring,” Yeo says.
Sue Wadden, director of color marketing for Sherwin-Williams, said that in some cases a color name can be a tiebreaker. “In the past, all a name needed to do was describe a color — for example, bright pink. Today, however, we want consumers to connect with colors. So instead, that color might be called ‘Vivacious.’ ”
Charlotte Cosby, head of creative at Farrow & Ball, says inspiration for their color names comes from all over. Cosby travels extensively for work, so she gets lots of name (and color) ideas from the places she visits, but just as important is the inspiration she finds in the landscape and dialect of England’s Dorset County, where the company is based. Farrow & Ball’s naming process is organic, Cosby says. “Even when we are not working on new colors, if we encounter a great name, it gets filed away for when we are.” Sometimes, she says, the color comes before the name, and sometimes the name comes before the color. An example of the latter is Farrow & Ball’s Mizzle. “Mizzle,” Cosby explains, “is the word we use in Dorset to describe the weather when it is both misty and drizzling.” Stored on a someday list, the name was eventually matched and attached to a hazy shade of gray green.