Skip to main content

Welkin

By August 26, 2012September 6th, 2013colors, Design, English Word, Layout, Typography-Font
Welkin: vault of the sky

welkin \WEL-kin\ noun

1.1: the vault of the sky : firmament
1.2: heaven

2 : the upper atmosphere


 Usage:
The pink sky at sunset brought to mind a quote from Shakespeare’s King John: “The sun of heaven, methought, was loath to set / But stay’d and made the western welkin blush.”

“Murray won the first set 6-4…. The welkin shook with British joy. The last Brit to win the Wimbledon title had been Fred Perry, in 1936.” — From a blog post by Calvin Tomkins at The New Yorker (online), July 9, 2012

  Origins:

When it comes to “welkin,” the sky’s the limit. This heavenly word has been used in English to refer to the vault of the sky since at least the 12th century, and it derives from an earlier word from Old English that meant “cloud.” In current English, “welkin” is still flying high, and it is often teamed with the verb “ring” to suggest a loud noise or an exuberant expression of emotion, as in “the welkin rang with the sound of the orchestra” or “her hearty laugh made the welkin ring.” These contemporary phrases echo an older use—the original words of a carol that once began “Hark, how all the welkin ring,” which we now know as “Hark! The herald angels sing.”

Entry in Webster's Dictionary

Colors

Hex#: 2a6c8c
RGB: 42.108.140
CMYK: 86.51.30.7
Pantone: 647 C

Hex#: 5cadcf
RGB: 92.173.207
CMYK: 62.16.10.0
Pantone: 2915 C

Hex#: 864b06
RGB: 134.75.6
CMYK: 33.69.100.30
Pantone: 1615 C

Hex#: c27010
RGB: 194.112.16
CMYK: 20.62.100.6
Pantone: 7414 C