Fischer–Saller scale

Human hair color scale From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Fischer–Saller Scale, named for eugenicist Eugen Fischer and German anthropologist Karl Saller [de], is used in physical anthropology and medicine to determine the shades of hair color. The scale uses the following designations:[1][2][3][4]

More information A, B to E ...
A very light blond
B to E light blond
F to L blond
M to O dark blond
P to T light brown to medium brown – "chatain"
U to Y dark brown/black – "brunet"
I, II, III, IV red
V, VI red blond
Close
The range of hair color represented in the FischerSaller scale.

Earlier scale

An earlier version of the scale created by Eugen Fischer, known as the Fischer Scale, used a different range of designations:[5][2][6]

More information 1–3, 12–19 ...
1–3 red
4 dark-brown
5 dark-brown / brown
6 brown / auburn
7 brown / lightbrown
8 brown / lightbrown
9 light-brown (sometimes in reddish shades) / some anthropologists call it dark-blond also
10 light-brown (sometimes in reddish shades) / some anthropologists call it dark-blond also
11 dark-blond / some anthropologists call it light-brown also
12–19 golden blond
20–25 ash-blond
26 dark ash-blond / some anthropologists call it lightbrown also
27–28 black
Close

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI