ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2014-08-22 08:50 pm

Describing Skin Tones

Here's a mostly tongue-in-cheek post about describing fair skin in some of the ways that dark skin is often described.

I have actually used "marzipan" as a skin tone. Also cream, peach, toast, porcelain, bisque, alabaster, grub (as in insect, not food), and uncooked bread dough. (Some of the descriptions were from a less-than-positive perspective.) Also in the white-people range are the pinkish-fair tones that are not copper, so things like ruddy, flushed, coral, and rosy apply.

Kay in Schrodinger's Heroes is Hispanic, but has fair skin, which I have described as vanilla latte: a dark cream or the palest possible brown.

Then there was the time I spent over an hour hunting around for synonyms and metaphors of "brown" that were based on things NOT associated with the slave trade, preferably things relating to African culture. Kola nut was a favorite. Ebony, which is dark brown to black, is a sacred wood in Africa and thus legit.

My desertfolk often have two or three colortones combined: rose-gold, rose-mocha, toasted-peaches-and-cream.  It's very rare to see truly pale skin or very dark skin in the Whispering Sands, but they cover an enormous range in between with subtle and complex variations of ruddy, shadowy, and tawny hues.  Very beautiful.  Oh, and to them "melon" is specifically the color of ladyparts and they make jokes about it.

dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)

Re: NO FAIR!

[personal profile] dialecticdreamer 2014-08-23 02:02 pm (UTC)(link)
She had skin the color of coconut milk, and brown hair rapidly turning the same...

Yeah, I'm good... in between fits of the giggles!

Actually, I've been laughing at the whole concept, because my skin tone is so amazingly IR-regular.
peoriapeoriawhereart: blond and brunet men peer intently (Napoleon & Illya peer)

Re: NO FAIR!

[personal profile] peoriapeoriawhereart 2014-08-23 08:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Well I was meaning for making your tapioca, since you have a 'milk replacement' and an oil to really get it going like it was whole.

I tan terra cotta, from a cod belly starting point.

One of my friends, it was startling seeing her after she'd had to be inside most of the time, because she had dark brown hair and white skin. She'd always been golden.