Heraldic Tinctures
Heraldic Tinctures: Tincture is the limited palette of colors and patterns used in heraldry. They are classified as metals, colours, or furs.
Colours and Metals
The metals are Or and Argent, representing gold and silver respectively, although in practice they are often depicted as yellow and white. As a general rule of Heraldic Design, do not put Metals on Metals or Colors on Colors (rule of tincture). The names of the Colours and Metals are derived from Norman French.
Note: The use of hatching to illustrate heraldic tinctures is post-period, and was developed by Silvestro de Petra Sancta, in 1638, to facilitate printing on the relatively recently developed printing press. It was sometimes used in the SCA when color Xeroxing was not available. It is no longer in general use in the SCA.
Stains
Stains (stainand colours or staynard colours): are generally not used in SCA Heraldry. In medieval heraldry, the use of a stain represented a less-than honorable augmentation (abatement or rebatement) imposed by an heraldic authority or by royal decree for misconduct (there is some historical debate on this). These colours include:
- Murrey: Deep mulberry-coloured, or reddish purpl (darker than Purpure).
- Sanguine: Blood-red (darker than Gules)
- Tenné (tawny): orange-tawny colour, though orange is considered distinct in continental European and African heraldic traditions.
Furs
In this earliest period, there were only two furs, ermine and vair. Ermine represents the fur of the stoat, a type of weasel, in its white winter coat, when it is called an ermine. Vair represents the winter coat of the red squirrel, which is blue-grey above and white below. There are examples of other "furs" but these are the most commonly used in SCA Heraldry.
Vair | Counter-Vair | Potent | Counter-Potent | Ermine | Ermines | Erminois | Pean | Papellone |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Colours may vary | Colours as Shown | Colours as Shown | Colours as Shown | Colours as Shown | Colours may vary |
Proper
A charge that is coloured as it naturally appears is blazoned proper (Fr. propre), or "the colour of nature". An example would be, "an orange tree fructed and eradicated proper," (left). Objects that do not occur in nature may not be described as "proper," such as a dragon or wyvern, and must be described by colour. Natural objects which might naturally be of different colours may be further described to clarify the colour of the charge such as a "wooden drop spindle threaded argent, proper" or a "brown dog" proper, (right).