The Guardian (USA)

Pantone launches new shade of red to end menstruati­on stigma

- Rebecca Smithers

Pantone has unveiled a new shade of red inspired by the colour of women’s periods, as part of a new campaign to end the stigma associated with menstruati­on. The company, which has the biggest colour matching system in the world, relied on by the global design industry, from graphic design to fashion, product design to printing, said the new shade was “an active and adventurou­s red hue” that it hoped would “embolden people who menstruate to feel proud of who they are”.

Pantone has teamed up with the Swedish feminine products brand Intimina to devise the new colour fronting its Seen+Heard campaign, which aims to empower and encourage people, regardless of gender, to talk in more detail about menstruati­on. Intimina said the colour was an “original shade of red that represents a steady flow”.

The Pantone system was devised in 1963 in the US to solve the problem of complicate­d colour matching in the printing industry. Its eponymous swatch book now has a spectrum of 2,625 colours and an enthusiast­ic following on Instagram.

Laurie Pressman, vice-president of the Pantone Color Institute, said:

“An active and adventurou­s red hue, ‘period’ emboldens people who menstruate to feel proud of who they are. To own their period with self-assurance; to stand up and passionate­ly celebrate the exciting and powerful life force they are born with; to urge everyone regardless of gender to feel comfortabl­e to talk spontaneou­sly and openly about this pure and natural bodily function.”

To highlight the new campaign, Intimina has made a donation to ActionAid, a charity working with women and girls living in poverty.

Jillian Popkins, ActionAid UK’s director of policy, said: “Around the world today, millions of women and girls still suffer due to the stigma associated with periods. Many girls miss vital days of school, or even drop out altogether, which is one reason so many women experience life-long poverty globally. Without the stigma around periods, more women could escape poverty, fulfil their potential and strengthen their communitie­s. This important campaign will help change that.”

Some of the world’s biggest brands have launched high-profile trademark battles to protect their rights to use Pantone’s strictly classified colours. Last year Mondelēz, owner of Cadbury, dropped its long-running battle to have the exclusive right to use the distinctiv­e colour purple (Pantone 2685c) after a court tussle with its rival Nestlé.

Every year Pantone names a “colour of the year” to reflect the mood of the times; 2020 was classic blue – although that was announced before the outbreak of coronaviru­s.

 ??  ?? Pantone has teamed up with the Swedish company Intimina to devise the colour fronting its campaign, ‘to empower and encourage people, regardless of gender, to talk in more detail about menstruati­on’.
Pantone has teamed up with the Swedish company Intimina to devise the colour fronting its campaign, ‘to empower and encourage people, regardless of gender, to talk in more detail about menstruati­on’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States