Appreciation of Koi Part 3:
About colors: black, white, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, purple, gold and silver
A lavish decoration of the white ground with Hi and Sumi
Colors red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and purple are visible in the skin of koi. There is a huge variety of neutral colors between these hues. The color range of “Chagoi”, in particular, is too wide to define in a word.
A set of Kohaku, Taisho Sanshoku and Showa Sanshoku is collectively called “Gosanke” or “Big Three”, and they are recognized as typical species of koi.
Kohaku is a red and white koi, which is characterized by red spots on the white ground. Taisho Sanshoku is a tricolored koi composed of red, white and black, whose colors is based on Kohaku’s constitution plus Sumi spots. Showa Sanshoku originally has a dark skin. Its color formation starts with exposure of white openings out of the dark skin, followed by appearances of red spots. Showa Sanshoku has its tones and forms of patterns different from Taisho Sanshoku, but this is also a tricolored koi composed of black, white, and red just like Taisho Sanshoku.
As to the relationship of the three colors of Gosanke, if I should say boldly, you can have an image of the white skin being decorated with Hi markings and Sumi markings.
Kohaku’s skin is considered to be excellent if it shows a fair tone. It is favorable to be tinged with snowy white or milk white. Also people like the skin to be as white as porcelain. Gosanke has an image of its white canvas printed with red and black spots.
The red color of Gosanke varies in tone according to each one of different species. A combination of red and yellow turns orange or persimmon color, and that of red and blue purplish.
Japanese people like Kohaku to have the traditional, soft shades of red, which is a vermilion color. Since Taisho Sanshoku is originated from Kohaku, its Hi spots are naturally required to follow Kohaku’s red tone.
Showa Sanshoku, however, has a larger amount of Sumi than the others. There is a case in which Showa Sanshoku looks good in a bluish tone of red. It is because black pigment still remains in Hi spots, not completely gone. The presence of a little contaminated tone of red leads to a balance between Hi spots and Sumi spots. There is also a case in which Showa Sanshoku with its white ground stained in black is attributed to the integration of the three colors.
A switch to white from black, but remains undone
It’s a true story that koi is originated from Magoi (black carp). While the Magoi was being kept in soft water, it happened to mutate into a koi with a light blue skin. In accordance with changes in environment, the blue color gradually lost its original hues. It is considered that further artificial hybridization caused discoloration and white ground was finally established.
Most of breeders in the early days studied hard by competing with each other to get rid of melanin pigment from Magoi, but their efforts were not always rewarded. They had to face a fact that the skin showed the darker shades of black because of the introduction of “Karasugoi”. Melanin is inherited from parents to children as a genotype. When a koi is left to take its own course, it quickly shows atavism and gets back its black skin.
Chromatic colors were initially put on Mujigoi, the koi bare of patterns. Among the Mujigoi are “Higoi”, “Orange Doitsu”, “Kigoi”, “Midorigoi”, “Soragoi”, “Konjo Asagi”, “Murasakigoi” , and each of their bodies are colored in seven different colors; red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and purple.
In addition, a gold color and silver are added to the original colors, and an unlimited number of colors are created by a mixture of different colors. The substance which emits light is guanophore, which is the same substance to shine the bodies of blueskinned fishes like mackerels and sardines.
The brightness of fish body is not reflected by the colors themselves. When the fish body shines yellow, it gives an image of shining golden. When a white color shines of itself, it looks silvery. When a fish is covered with a metallic reddish color, it shines brown.
Koi has two different types in the ways of shining, Hikarimono and Kinginrin. The former shows that the entire fish body shines, while the latter shows that each piece of scales emit lights. Recent technology has made it possible to produce the koi which bears both characters, and a diversified combination of richly colors has boosted up the number of species to infinity.
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Wakagoi 若鯉
by RINKO Online | Dec 14, 2021
Young Nishikigoi
Wagoi 和鯉
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Fully scaled koi that originally inhabit Japan
Ushirogiwa (Ushiro Kiwa) 後ろギワ
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The back edge of a pattern
Urushizumi (Urushi Sumi) 漆墨
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Lacquer-black sumi
Urokogiwa (Uroko Kiwa) 鱗ギワ
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Flame along with scale edges that shape scalloped edge
Uroko 鱗
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Scales
Uojirami ウオジラミ
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Fish lice
Tsuya ツヤ
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Gloss. Luster
Tsukitsuke つきつけ
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Head hi extends to close to the area of mouth. Another name for hanatsuki
Tsubozumi (Tsubo Sumi) ツボ墨
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Sumi appears on shiroji very close to hi patterns. It looks like sumi fits in...
Tosai 当歳
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Baby koi. Nishikigoi that are less than 1 year old
Tohi 頭緋
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Hi pattern on Nishikigoi's head
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Author: RINKO Online
RINKO was published in 1962 as the first Nishikigoi magazine in the world. Dr Takeo Kuroki organized Oita Airinkai (koi club) with 53 members. He wrote the most articles which were written on A5 size paper, printed in black and white and 28 pages long with his wife’s artwork on the front cover. When Dr Kuroki met our founder Shuji Fujita, they consulted on publishing his first book “Nishikigoi”. This created hundreds and thousands of “koi-kichi” (koi lovers/people crazy about koi). Their work together resulted in the success of RINKO Issue 15, the first cover printed in color. Since then their journey of introducing Nishikigoi culture to the world has blossomed.