Fischer–Saller scale

Human hair color scale From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fischer–Saller scale

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 Thumb very light blond
B to E Thumb light blond
F to L Thumb blond
M to O Thumb dark blond
P to T Thumb light brown to medium brown – "chatain"
U to Y Thumb dark brown/black – "brunet"
I, II, III, IV Thumb red
V, VI Thumb red blond
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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
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See also

References

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