written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Showing posts with label The Colour Red. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Colour Red. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 September 2012

10 Interesting facts that all writers should know about the colour red

00:00:00 Posted by Ashley Lister , , 6 comments

 by Lee Howell


1.    Red was one of the first colours used by artists in paintings back in 25000 BC, the natural pigments such as red ochre and iron oxide were readily available. 

2.    There are many expressions that as a writer we can use in our writing but are encouraged not to do so because they have been heard so many times before.  Some referring to the colour red are: “to paint the town red” – to have a real fun evening with lots of eating, drinking and dancing.  “Like a red rag to a bull” – to make someone become really angry. "To catch someone red-handed" – to catch someone in the act of doing something wrong. 

3.    Red is a very warm Feng Shui colour that should be used in a writing room to relax the writer.  Red objects lovingly used for this purpose are: lamps, candles, computer, fireplace and artwork containing the colour red.

4.    Writers should watch what they eat.  It has been widely documented that consumption of red meat halves the risk of depression.  Components of red wine help to prevent cancer, protecting also against heart problems and improving brain function.  Red grapes are extremely rich in both fibre and antioxidants which reduce the risks of cardiovascular disease.

5.    For business it became unacceptable to use red ink because red ink will not copy on a black and white office copier with a red laser.  A red laser can't distinguish red ink on a white sheet of paper. When you project red light on something white, it looks red. When you project red light on something red, it looks red. So there's practically no contrast between the ink and the paper so the scanner can't read the marks.

6.    “If one says 'Red' – the name of the colour and there are fifty people listening, it can be expected that there will be fifty reds in their minds. And one can be sure that all these reds will be very different." -- Josef Albers.

7.    Red is a popular colour for song writers some well-known examples are: "Lady in Red" by Chris de Burgh; "Little Red Corvette" by Prince and “Red, Red Wine" by UB40.

8.    Red is a colour associated and used with vengeance in stories describing poison, passion and seduction.

9.    The colour red is known to increase enthusiasm, stimulate energy, increase blood pressure, respiration and pulse rate.  It can encourage action and confidence and provide a sense of protection from fears and anxiety.

10.  My favourite red item at home is a bamboo plaque with some Chinese writing on it and underneath is a large red Chinese knot and tassels.  The red Chinese knot has come to be the symbol of reunion, luck, harmony, and love.


Every writer should bring a little red into their lives for enjoyment, health and prosperity.
What is your most important red item and why?


***

Lee Howell is a UK based author and writer in the making, as well as an employee, mother and wife. More of Lee's writing can be found on her blog at http://budbin.wordpress.com/

Monday, 24 September 2012

Culling Fields


Culling fields

What price a pint of milk, the fillet steak
must reach to keep the farmers from harm's wake
to save them from the cold, from being poor
is it the badger or the superstore?

For every pint of milk a pint of blood
it seems to be and so with toughest love
the bodies of wise beasts are found on roads
killed by cars that leave neat bullet holes.

Roll up, roll up, come hear the great grotesque
a cull signed off by those who ring no necks
but leave ten thousand carcasses or more
from their desks a simple signature; an all out species war.

And just like war, we find each day it is covered on TV
Spun into little half truths to persuade you and me
that this disease, Bovine TB (which is not even theirs)
is firstly a: inevitable, b: solely carried by wiry hairs.

This genocide, this fools prevention cannot be the cure
diseases grow, they multiply, there'll always be one more
Vaccinating is not an option, ask the great EU
and yet we'll fly in pesticides and peppers from Peru.

Feasible to think that those same veg could just grow here,
fields stocked full of each of them, food to last a year.
But the truth is the hand outs are better with disease ridden pets
so the farmers keep on growing beef, ignoring all the rest.

By easter, Springwatch will use infra red light
As the badgers get harder to find in the night
Then what next- the midges, the mozzies, the men?
For in truth, we are more diseased than all of them.


Shaun Brookes

The theme this week is The Colour Red, which is often not quite as black and white as you'd think. Thanks for reading, S.