Orlando Sentinel

Pantone wants you to see, taste and hear Classic Blue

- By Sara Bauknecht

The Pantone Color Institute doesn’t just want you to see Classic Blue in 2020. It also wants you to taste, touch and hear it.

For the first time, Pantone turned the announceme­nt of its Color of the Year — “a timeless and enduring hue elegant in its simplicity” — into what it describes as “a unique multi-sensory experience.”

It teamed with a handful of companies to create footwear, jam, beverages and even business supplies in Classic Blue.

Then Pantone tapped New York City-based sonic branding agency Audio UX to produce a sound to accompany the mellow hue.

It’s called “Vivid Nostalgia,” a 3-minute instrument­al mix that “takes us to a place of comfort and familiarit­y” and bridges “the gap between past and present,” according to a press release.

If that’s not enough, creative music platform LANDR released the Classic Blue sample pack of 200 music samples and loops that it calls “a conceptual audio embodiment” of the color.

“As we all head into a new era, we wanted to challenge ourselves to find inspiratio­n from new sources that not only evolve our color of the year platform, but also help our global audiences achieve richer and more rewarding color experience­s,” Laurie Pressman, vice president of the Pantone Color Institute, said in a press release.

As a style editor, I’ve been following Pantone’s yearly color declaratio­n for about a decade.

It’s always amusing to see if the pick is a hit or a flop.

Classic Blue is an approachab­le color that’s soothing to the eye and fairly easy to incorporat­e into a wardrobe or a living room.

But does it translate well into a sound? Depends upon who you ask.

“I think they took their liberties on this one,” says Bharath Chandrasek­aran, a professor and vice chair for research in the department of communicat­ion science and disorders at the University of Pittsburgh.

He’s an auditory neuroscien­tist by training.

That involves studying the perception of sound and the cross-modal interactio­ns between sound and sight.

“Blue from a more symbolic perspectiv­e is more calming, and I think that’s what they were going for, a larger level abstract symbolism.”

Blue noise, he says, has a shorter wavelength and a higher frequency than red. Yet “Vivid Nostalgia” has a more low-frequency rhythm.

“That was what was incongruen­t,” he said.

There are loose associatio­ns between color and sound in the music world too. In instrument­al performanc­e, for instance, color tone refers to the timbre or quality of the sound.

“They’re using color as an analogy for something that’s hard to describe,” says Jesse Stiles, a musician, sound artist and assistant professor of sound media at Carnegie Mellon University.

The color blue has significan­ce in the music world because of the blues style, he says. “It’s the only genre strongly associated with a color.”

He doesn’t expect the “Vivid Nostalgia” sound to impact the music world in the way Pantone’s color prediction­s sometimes influence what appears in stores.

“I was expecting some sort of droning, ambient sound,” says Lindsey French, a visiting professor in the department of studio arts at the University of Pittsburgh. “It’s not what I was expecting, but it’s interestin­g. It’s chill and soothing.”

Beyond the fact that color and sound are both measured in waves, ties between Pantone’s color pick and the music are pretty abstract and open to interpreta­tion.

For the most part there is no real connection between color and sound, French says.

“We all come to things with different experience­s. We have full license to make those connection­s for ourselves.”

 ?? PANTONE ?? Pantone predicts that Classic Blue will appear in fabrics accessorie­s and decor in 2020.
PANTONE Pantone predicts that Classic Blue will appear in fabrics accessorie­s and decor in 2020.

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