Greyscale colours now make up three quarters of cars produced globally, compared to less than 50% in the past.
Just look at a parking lot from the 1980s compared to one today.
This change has also happened to interior design.
These were the most popular colours of the paint brand Dulux in 2020:
And here are the most popular kitchen paint colours in the UK, from 2019-20.
Or compare a typical 1970s home to a modern designer home.
While it is wholly understandable not to miss the garish colours of bygone eras, it is interesting to note the change.
Similarly, there is a trend of whitewashing everything — be it made of wood, brick, plaster, or anything else.
While grey is now the most common carpet colour:
And neutral colours are by far the most popular when it comes to clothing:
Even McDonald's is less vibrant than it used to be!
In films, too, there has been a general trend (with some notable exceptions) toward neutral or darker colours and desaturation, whether in costume and set design or colour grading.
The evolution of Superman:
Some of this is related to building materials.
Concrete, steel, glass, and plastics, which dominate modern construction, are generally less rich and varied than the colours of wood, brick, terracotta, bronze, masonry, and so on.
But that doesn't really explain it, because steel or plastic or concrete can easily be painted any colour we like.
It's just the case that neutral colours are the ones we now choose.
In metros, for example, what might once have been green is now, by default, white or grey.
It wasn't so long ago that ovens, toasters, kettles, and fridges were almost always colourful, even when made from the same materials.
This trend includes just about everything, even... IKEA.
So the world is becoming less colourful, for good or for bad.
The only question is: why?
Is it just a fashion which will eventually pass, or something more fundamental?
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Iran has some of the world's most ancient, important, and beautiful architecture.
So here is a very brief introduction, from ziggurats and Zoroastrian fire temples to crystal mosques and the first ever churches...
This is Shahr-e Sukhteh, a city inhabited as far back as 3,500 BC, at the dawn of human civilisation.
In about 3,000 BC it was destroyed by fire — hence its name, which means "The Burned City".
Though it did recover and continue to flourish for another thousand years.
And here is Chogha Zanbil, a ziggurat built by the Elamites in about 1,200 BC.
It isn't far from Susa, an ancient city which played an important role in the history of Mesopotamia, ever in competition with the great cities of the Sumerians and the Akkadians.
Siena, in Italy, is surely one of the most beautiful places in the world.
But because of building regulations it is now illegal to design cities like this...
Siena, like many old cities, wasn't really "built" at all, in the sense that one person or a group of people planned it all out.
Such places are the natural result of centuries of construction, demolition, neglect, rebuilding, expansion, and development.
So to build a town like Siena (or Korčula in Croatia, say) is, by definition, not possible.
But they do have certain features of urban design which could be replicated: narrow or winding streets, varied elevation, specific building materials, architectural styles, density...