Chartreuse
Decorating with
this unique color!
It’s not every color that requires
its own pronunciation guide, nor is it every one that comes with
as flavorful a history as chartreuse. This may not be reason
enough to paint the whole house or apartment in this chilly greenish yellow,
but chartreuse is certainly a color worth knowing if you’re
planning on being conversant in the finer points of home décor.
First, the pronunciation: shahr-TROOZ.
Next, the definition of the color. This is a bit trickier, and
if you browse around the paint store, or if you ask in the
fabric shop, or if you look around the furniture showroom,
chances are you’ll come home with swatches of decidedly
different shades. Some people see chartreuse as a pale
greenish-yellow, others as a light, yellowish green.
The word itself is what’s called a “toponym”–a word
derived from a place. The original chartreuse is Chartreuse
Mountain, after which came the name La Grande Chartreuse, which
was the Carthusian monastery in Grenoble. There, the monks
produced an aromatic liqueur, which in turn was named–you
guessed it–chartreuse.
The liqueur had such a distinctive color that it needed its own
name; and once the name had been determined, people of course
began finding, and creating, other things of that same color.
Yes, you can still buy chartreuse at the monastery–or in your
local liquor store if you’re not looking for an excuse to go
to France.
Now that you know the history of the word, your next question
might be what to do with this color.
There is something a little eerie about chartreuse, so we
recommend saving it for smaller spots in a room, and pairing it
carefully with something warmer. A rust or brown works
especially well, and a darker green, if the tone and value are
the same as that in the chartreuse, can also work. But be
careful not to pair it with something too bright.
And if you really want to impress your friends or design
clients, you can toss in this bit of poetry when the subject of
chartreuse comes up:
"Lost with the sun in a chartreuse wood, afflicted
by associations, flies, thirst, and by
a growing chill my clothes cannot keep out ..."
- (Eleanor Wilner, Reversing the
Spell: New and Selected Poems, Feb 1998.)
–Sarah
Van Arsdale
Reproduced with permission from
Sheffield
School of Interior Design
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