Black Gold (Corporate)

In pattern GKGKBWGKG.

This was sourced from tartans-authority. It is a 9 stripes tartan.

Original link http://www.tartansauthority.com/tartan-ferret/display/4253/

Thread count

T/4 K4 DG44 N2 B56 K36 T6 K6 T/6 Sett

Palette

Each colour and its ΔE from the base-6 reference it is a variant of.

ColourShadeBaseΔE (OKLab)
B#3C5070 #3C5070B #2C40840.07
DG#003820 #003820G #0064000.16
K#000000 #000000K #0000000.00
N#C8C8C8 #C8C8C8W #F4F4F00.13
T#604000 #604000G #0064000.14

Nearest tartans

The nearest existing variants by ΔTartan distance.

  1. Ogilvy Hunting — ΔT 0.67
  2. Thomas of Craigie (Personal) — ΔT 0.79
  3. Ogilvie of Inverarity - 1842 (V.S.) — ΔT 0.81
  4. Ogilvy Hunting — ΔT 0.83
  5. Ogilvy VS — ΔT 0.86
  6. 79th Regiment (Military) — ΔT 0.88
  7. Ogilvy VS — ΔT 0.92
  8. Lochaber Cameron — ΔT 0.97
  9. Lochaber District Tartan Tartan Number: 685. Earliest known date: pre 1800 An "Old superfine tartan sett" from Wilson's Key pattern book. Possibly a Fencibles tartan. Fencibles were a kind of Home Guard formed at the time of the Napoleonic Invasion threat. It is generally accepted as a district tartan and known to have existed as early as 1797. One of the original specimens of this tartan can be found in the West Highland Museum in Fort William. 1819 Key Pattern Book. One of the Strathmore Wilsons range. See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015 — ΔT 0.98
  10. Colqhoun VS — ΔT 1.01

Neighbour map

Every grey dot is one of 15726 variants placed by the first two principal components of the ΔTartan feature space (44% of its variance). Red is this tartan; blue dots are its nearest — click one to open its page.

Ogilvy HuntingThomas of Craigie (Personal)Ogilvie of Inverarity - 1842 (V.S.)Ogilvy HuntingOgilvy VS79th Regiment (Military)Ogilvy VSLochaber CameronLochaber District Tartan Tartan Number: 685. Earliest known date: pre 1800 An "Old superfine tartan sett" from Wilson's Key pattern book. Possibly a Fencibles tartan. Fencibles were a kind of Home Guard formed at the time of the Napoleonic Invasion threat. It is generally accepted as a district tartan and known to have existed as early as 1797. One of the original specimens of this tartan can be found in the West Highland Museum in Fort William. 1819 Key Pattern Book. One of the Strathmore Wilsons range. See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015Colqhoun VS

ID: /setts/s9/g6k6g6k36b56w2ga44k4g4-b3c5070-g604000-ga003820-k000000-wc8c8c8/

© 2022 - 2026 · Tartan Dictionary · Theme Simpleness Powered by Hugo ·