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Latest comment: 13 years ago10 comments7 people in discussion
I don't think the 1998 quote is talking about something that is antique brass coloured, just an antique that is brass-coloured.
2007, J. G. Weddie, 97 Evergreen West, AuthorHouse, →ISBN, Chapter 18, page 212:
It was antique brass in color, and had the logo and unite designation on one side, and a helicopter relief of the same make and model we had just flown on the reverse.
"Antique brass color" does not imply that "antique brass" is a colour, only that it has a colour. A book calling something "sky colour" does not imply the existence of a colour called "sky". Equinox◑16:30, 25 July 2010 (UTC)Reply
Yes, it does. I also think some of the this at google books:"black and antique brass" are good, though it's hard to be certain that they mean antique brass color. They certainly don't mean literal antique brass, but they might mean brass that's made to look antique (as here), in which I'm not sure if that counts. Regardless, there is some idiomatic sense here, unless we're missing a sense at ]. —RuakhTALK22:25, 16 January 2011 (UTC)Reply
How could we tell whether the color in the color patch was the color being referred to? Was it the same in 1929 as in 1998? The same in all contexts? It's hard enough with the definitions of words using other words in contexts of words. Aren't we dependent on color theorists, color scholars, and color historians to a far greater extent than we depend on the comparable word professionals? DCDuringTALK