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Chemical compound
Fuchsine (sometimes spelled fuchsin) or rosaniline hydrochloride is a magenta dye with chemical formula C20H19N3·HCl. There are other similar chemical
Fuchsine
Color
the French chemist François-Emmanuel Verguin, who originally called it fuchsine. It was renamed to celebrate the French-Sardinian victory under French
Magenta
Color
color of a new aniline dye called fuchsine, patented in 1859 by the French chemist François-Emmanuel Verguin. The fuchsine dye was renamed magenta later in
Fuchsia_(color)
Chemical compound
New fuchsine is an organic compound with the formula [(H2N(CH3)C6H3)3C]Cl. It is a green-colored solid that is used as a dye of the triarylmethane class
New_fuchsine
Chemical compound
Acid fuchsin or fuchsine acid, (also called Acid Violet 19 and C.I. 42685) is an acidic magenta dye with the chemical formula C20H17N3Na2O9S3. It is a
Acid_fuchsin
Class of dye
aryl group. Fuchsine dyes Pararosaniline Fuchsine (hydrochloride salt) New fuchsine (As chloride) Fuchsine acid Phenol dyes have hydroxyl groups at the
Triarylmethane_dye
Chemical compound
aldehydes, in the Schiff test. It is the only basic fuchsine component suitable for making the aldehyde-fuchsine stain for pancreatic islet beta cells. It has
Pararosaniline
Investigative procedure in microbiology
They are stained pink or red by the counterstain, commonly safranin or fuchsine. Lugol's iodine solution is always added after addition of crystal violet
Gram_stain
German businessman (1825-1880)
Bayer to diversify his sales programme. The coal tar dyes Aniline blue and Fuchsine, which Bayer initially imported, surpassed natural dyes in purity and brilliance
Friedrich_Bayer
Organic chemistry named reaction
sulfite [of fuchsine] or even the yellow solution which was prepared in the above-mentioned way and which contains leukaniline [i.e., fuchsine treated with
Schiff_test
Method for quantifying airborne pollen
these sections are mounted on a microscope slide with fuchsine-stained gelatine. The fuchsine selectively stains plant material magenta, making the pollen
Pollen_count
Chemical compound
turmeric and sappan. It competed with the early synthetic dye fuchsine as a silk dye after fuchsine's 1859 discovery. Carthamin is composed of two chalconoids;
Carthamin
Chemical compound
7-disulfonate Other names D&C Red 33, Acid Red 33, Azo grenadine, Azo fuchsine, Acid fuchsine D, Redusol Z, Azo magenta G, Certicol Red B, Fast acid magenta
D&C_Red_33
Staining dye
alcian blue, Verhoeff hematoxylin and crocein scarlet combined with acidic fuchsine and saffron. At pH 2.5, alcian blue is fixed by electrostatic binding with
Movat's_stain
German master dyer and co-founder of Bayer AG
partnership, initially focused on synthetic coal-tar (aniline) dyes such as fuchsine, grew into the company later known as Bayer AG. Weskott was born in Elberfeld
Johann_Friedrich_Weskott
Bacteria that give a positive result in the Gram stain test
outer membrane, causing them to take up the counterstain (safranin or fuchsine) and appear red or pink. Despite their thicker peptidoglycan layer, gram-positive
Gram-positive_bacteria
Biological stain whose color contrasts with the principal stain
a microscope. Examples include the malachite green counterstain to the fuchsine stain in the Gimenez staining technique and the eosin counterstain to haematoxylin
Counterstain
Swiss silk dyer and chemical-industry pioneer, founder of Ciba
industrialist and silk dyer who, in 1859, began producing the synthetic dye fuchsine in Basel. In 1873 he sold his works to Bindschedler & Busch, the predecessor
Alexander_Clavel
Histological stain
identifying elastic fibers. Often orcein or a combination of resorcinol and fuchsine are used for staining. For counterstaining cell nuclei nuclear fast red
Weigert's_elastic_stain
violet DBDMH Diazolidinyl urea Electrolysed water Ethanol Eucalyptus oil Fuchsine Germicidal lamp Gluma Glutaraldehyde Hand sanitizer Hexachlorocyclohexa-2
List_of_cleaning_products
German multinational pharmaceutical and biotechnology company
Weskott, a master dyer. Bayer was responsible for the commercial tasks. Fuchsine and aniline became the company's most important products. The headquarters
Bayer
Swiss multinational pharmaceutical corporation
began in 1859, when Alexander Clavel (1805–1873) took up the production of fuchsine in his factory for silk-dyeing works in Basel. By 1873, he sold his dye
Novartis
Technique used to enhance visual contrast of specimens observed under a microscope
whilst apoptotic cells retain the distinctive red-orange fluorescence. Acid fuchsine may be used to stain collagen, smooth muscle, or mitochondria. Acid fuchsin
Staining
Range of colors with the hues between blue and red
is 3-amino-2,±9-dimethyl-5-phenyl-7-(p-tolylamino)phenazinium acetate. Fuchsine was another synthetic dye made shortly after mauveine. It produced a brilliant
Purple
Printing process using zinc plates
colored lacquer varnish called fuchsine, dried, dipped in benzene. This would dissolve the varnishes, leaving only the fuchsine varnish in the areas associated
Zincography
Staining method
heteropolyacids into microtechnique. Mallory's trichrome method, using acid fuchsine followed by a solution containing PTA, orange G and aniline blue, provides
Heidenhain's AZAN trichrome stain
Heidenhain's_AZAN_trichrome_stain
Danish physicist (1843–1917)
discovered the anomalous dispersion of numerous dyes, including aniline red (fuchsine), by recording absorption spectra. In 1884, he confirmed the Stefan–Boltzmann
Christian Christiansen (physicist)
Christian_Christiansen_(physicist)
German physician and botanist (1501–1566)
first description of "Fuchsia triphylla, flore coccineo" in 1703. The dye fuchsine (fuchsin, rosaniline hydrochloride or magenta) is named after the flower
Leonhart_Fuchs
Varieties of the color magenta
the town of Magenta in northern Italy. The color was originally called fuchsine or roseine, but for marketing purposes in 1860 the color name was changed
Shades_of_magenta
Compounds having a fully conjugated cyclic dione structure
where both O's are replaced by one N and one C, illustrated by various fuchsine dyes like pararosaniline IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 5th
Quinone
German chemist (1852–1919)
of indigo and the many substances related to it. He next turned to the fuchsine (then called "rosaniline") magenta dyes, and in collaboration with his
Emil_Fischer
French chemist (1786–1889)
Michel-Eugène E. (1861). "Note sur les étoffes de soie teintes avec la fuchsine, et réflexions sur la commerce des étoffes de couleur". Répertoire de Pharmacie
Michel_Eugène_Chevreul
Soluble chemical substance or natural material which can impart color to other materials
in organic chemistry in general. Other aniline dyes followed, such as fuchsine, safranine, and induline. Many thousands of synthetic dyes have since been
Dye
Polish scientist and banker
1884) was a Polish Jewish chemist and banker, one of the discoverers of Fuchsine. He wrote the first textbook on organic chemistry in the Polish language
Jakub_Natanson
Polysaccharide layer that lies outside the cell envelope in many bacteria
(which changes color to bluish-grey due to the pH), and the pink stain is fuchsine. Serological methods: Capsular material is antigenic and can be demonstrated
Bacterial_capsule
Cultivar group of shrubs
new to camellias: 'Donation' is said to be Tyrian rose, 'Lady Gowrie' fuchsine pink. Nearly all crosses have flowers with translucent petals. More than
Camellia_×_williamsii
Group of chemical compounds used as dye
degradation, and absorption onto various solids such as activated charcoal. Fuchsine Methylene blue Methyl blue Egyptian Blue Han Purple Fluorescein Gorgas
Methyl_violet
quinone-imine 25641-18-3 Azo-eosin Azoeosin G Acid red 4 14710 azo 5858-39-9 Azo Fuchsine 6B Acid violet 7 18055 azo 4321-69-1 Azophloxine Red 2G Azogeranin B Amidonaphthol
List_of_dyes
Culture medium used in microbiology
(K2HPO4) 1.0 % lactose 0.33 % anhydrous sodium sulfite (Na2SO3) 0.03 % fuchsine 1.25 % agar "Mondofacto". Archived from the original on March 3, 2016.
Endo_agar
Polish student corporation
professor at the Main School in Warsaw, and one of the discoverers of Fuchsine Andrzej Niemojewski (1864–1921), social and political activist, poet, rationalist
Konwent_Polonia
Class of ions
Fuchsine (hydrochloride salt), a commercial dye that contains a carbenium ion.
Carbenium_ion
German chemist (1841–1927)
Lucius und Brüning (today Hoechst AG). He supervised the production of Fuchsine and researched violet colorants made using iodine. The work with iodine
Carl_Graebe
the cell walls red in the process. Lactofuchsin, a 1% solution of basic fuchsine in lactic acid, dries much slower than water, so the slide may be preserved
Lactofuchsin_mount
Study of silk industry players in Lyon
(specialist in black dye), Guinon (Lyon's largest dyer), and Renard (founder of fuchsine), as well as families of thread makers. In 1866, there were 122 silk merchants
Silk_industry_in_Lyon
Chemical compound
two or three of the aryl groups. Triarylmethane dyes Crystal violet. New fuchsine dye. Pararosaniline Triphenylmethane (C6H5)3CH Triphenylmethanol (C6H5)3COH
Triphenylcarbenium
Subclass of glycerophospholipids
vinyl-ether bond to yield aldehydes. In turn, the latter reacted with a fuchsine-sulfurous acid stain used in this nuclear staining method and gave rise
Plasmalogen
Chemical compound
François-Emmanuel Verguin reacted aniline with stannic chloride to yield fuchsine, a rose colored dye, the first of the triphenylmethane dyes. Further work
Synthetic_colorant
Swiss industrialist and politician (1830–1917)
dye-extraction plant. Within a few years the firm began production of synthetic fuchsine, one of the early aniline dyes. From the late 1850s the company increasingly
Johann_Rudolf_Geigy-Merian
History of Lyon during the 19th-century Napoleonic and Imperial eras
Dyeing houses included the Gillet family, Guinon, and Renard (founders of fuchsine). The number of silk entrepreneurs doubled in the first fifty years of
Lyon from the First to the Second Empire
Lyon_from_the_First_to_the_Second_Empire
is the work of Auer et al., who demonstrated that another anionic dye, fuchsine acid, could successfully bind to damaged neurons after a hyperglycemic
Fluoro-jade_stain
of the law of August 1, 1876, etc. Falsification of wines by means of fuchsine, etc. Barcelona, imp. de Ramírez y C.ª, 1877. In 4°, 21 pages. Report on
Ramón_de_Manjarrés
American woman inventor and company director
which plates were successively bathed in a solution of tannin and basic fuchsine. He did conclude that only mechanical methods, rather than the random Autochrome
Florence_Maude_Warner
FUCHSINE
FUCHSINE
FUCHSINE
FUCHSINE
Male
English
English form of Old French Raimund, RAYMOND means "wise protector."Â
Boy/Male
Greek English
Defender of men; protector of mankind.
Girl/Female
Indian
Light in Heart
Girl/Female
Hindu
Slenderness
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
First
Boy/Male
American, British, English
Male Deer
Girl/Female
Greek
Of the west wind.
Girl/Female
Hindu
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Indian, Sanskrit
Peacock
Boy/Male
British, English
Town Full of Trees
FUCHSINE
FUCHSINE
FUCHSINE
FUCHSINE
FUCHSINE
n.
A complex nitrogenous base, C20H21N3O, obtained by oxidizing a mixture of aniline and toluidine, as a colorless crystalline substance which forms red salts. These salts are essential components of many of the socalled aniline dyes, as fuchsine, aniline red, etc. By extension, any one of the series of substances derived from, or related to, rosaniline proper.
n.
Aniline red; an artificial coal-tar dyestuff, of a metallic green color superficially, resembling cantharides, but when dissolved forming a brilliant dark red. It consists of a hydrochloride or acetate of rosaniline. See Rosaniline.
n.
An aniline dye obtained as an amorphous substance having a green bronze surface color, which dissolves to a shade of red; also, the color; -- so called from Magenta, in Italy, in allusion to the battle fought there about the time the dye was discovered. Called also fuchsine, roseine, etc.
n.
A trade name for a dyestuff, consisting essentially of impure fuchsine.