In the US, pink for girls and blue for boys has traditionally been used in decorating, clothing, toys, and signage. Just curios if this is the case in every country or just here?
We think today it’s traditional but it’s surprisingly recent in the U.S. probably not being a strong trend until 1940 and not being universal until long after that according to this Smithsonian magazine article. Earlier the colors had been opposite:
It would only be universal even today only to the extent that U.S. culture has infiltrated other traditions.
with ultrasounds people now start buying kids stuff in the right color before the kid is born.
Once again, the master spaketh…
I lived in Korea and China for a long time. They’re aware of the blue/pink association, but don’t observe it closely. I knew a badass college boy who scootered around town on a pink scooter. He wasn’t the only one.
Go back a bit further (well, OK, a lot further) and boys weren’t called boys - they were called girls - ‘girl’ just meant ‘infant’ or ‘child’ - to differentiate the sexes, male children were called ‘knave girls’ and female children were called ‘gay girls’.
The jokes just write themselves sometimes.
No. As mentioned elsewhere, in Thailand pink is the color for anyone born on a Tuesday, myself included. This is why the school color for Chuklalongkorn University is pink, because King Chulalongkorn – the little boy in The King and I – was born on a Tuesday. Blue is for anyone born on a Friday. List of birth colors here.
There are no colors here specifically for girls and boys.
Huh. Weird. For some reason, you’d expect the colours in such a scheme to match those of the rainbow. 7 days, 7 colours, 7 symbols, that sort of thing.
So why is Wednesday night different?
Pakistan, yes we do.
But, I suspect that it’s a copying of UK/US, it’s not a particularly important issue after all.
Plus it makes clothes manufacturers happy.
I’ve never figured that one out. And there’s disagreement over Wednesday night’s color. The earlier link said light green, while this one says gray. I’d play it safe and not be born on a Wednesday night.
EDIT: Supposedly it’s unlucky here to get a haircut on a Wednesday, but I don’t think that has anything to do with it.
One thing that generally comes up in these discussions wasn’t mentioned by Cecil. I doubt that it really has any bearing on the issue, but it still comes up:
Some people claim the two familiar and often paired paintings “Blue Boy” by Gainsborough, and “Pinkie” by Thomas Lawrence had a lot to do with it. Those are two painting by 18th Century English portrait painters, but they weren’t widely reproduced and published together until many years later when they wound up displayed together in the same gallery.
(The pairing of the two painting doesn’t make that much sense in some ways - they were painted 20 years apart and the style of dress differs by well over a century. “Pinkie” was a commissioned portrait of a wealthy man’s 11 year old daughter, and she is portrayed wearing the contemporary fashions of her day. “Blue Boy” is period piece painted by Gainsborough as a tribute to one of the 17th century painters he greatly admired, and he painted his model in 17th century costume.)
It is the rainbow. The only color missing is indigo, and a lot of people think that Newton was fudging when he included it. Indigo is almost impossible to discern in a real rainbow and I think most cultures never included it.
I’m lucky. My colour is purple, which I like.
I “read somewhere” (that is, no cite) that red for boys/ blue for girls (mentioned as the rule before WWI in a previous post) thing dated back to the middle-ages.
Seven colors in the rainbow is certainly not universal. Some languages don’t even have seven color words, or only do because of late additions. E.g. see the relatively recent distinction of orange from yellow or red in English, or yellow/green/blue color words in other languages.
Obviously there might not be a specific word for each color, but people who could see a rainbow 2000 years ago could see seven distinct colors. They might just refer to one of them as light red, red like an orange, etc.
Here is a story from the public radio program Radiolab. It describes a big study by William Gladstone in the nineteenth century of The Odyssey and The Iliad; there were no mentions of the color blue. The story goes on to describe how the color blue is a relatively recent addition to the language.
Why would they? There aren’t seven and only seven distinct colors in a rainbow. The number seven is entirely arbitrary when it comes to the spectrum.