= the color of the matrix bearing a fossilized fish; the fur trim on an Eskimo yo-yo; a specimen of staghorn coral; the outer skin of coconut frond that makes up the weave of a Marshallese Kili bag; and a disk of Yap stone money.

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Please say hello to Thomas Watling's Rainbow Lorikeet (Trichoglossus moluccanus) [between 1792 & 1797].

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Colors are everywhere at The Ringling! Celebrate with your own colorful photos from your last visit, and see if you can create your own

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in the in is a fairly easy one for a . The stunning seascape by Francis Sartorius has many different shades. Lots of blue objects too, like these old pharmacy bottles in our 'Row' street scene.

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Flying Near the Rainbow, 1980 by Napatchie Pootoogook (#Inuit, b. Sako, Baffin Island, 1938 - d. Cape Dorset, 2002), stonecut and stencil on paper, The Michael and Gail Golych Collection © Dorset Fine Arts

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Museum Monologues 3pm, 5pm & 6pm - free performances bringing to life stories of LGBTQ pioneers produced by . Project coincides with ‘Desire, love, identity: exploring LGBTQ histories in Bolton’. Plus will be here at 7pm!

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We have all the colours of the and more. How many colours and pigments can you spot on your next visit?

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Our collection contains numerous coloured glass artefacts inc. a Ballysnod Dairy glass milk bottle, a green glass bottle inscribed 'Crawford & Crawford, Sallagh Spring, Larne' & a yellow glass plate for Queen Victoria's Jubilee in 1887.

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The colour most people associate with Oliver is black, by the way he is depicted in films. In reality are no portraits of him wearing black (& few descriptions) as it was an expensive dye, so Charles I is more commonly shown wearing it!

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Our collection of sèvres porcelain boasts the colours of the rainbow.

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To brighten your morning here are a beautiful pair of rainbow lorikeets from volume 5 of Gould’s 'Birds of Australia', 1848.

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“Color directly influences the soul. Color is the keyboard, the eyes are the hammers, the soul is the piano with many strings. The artist id the hand that plays, touching one key of another purposively, to cause vibrations in the soul" - Vasily Kandinsky

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