Ochre is a brownish-yellow pigment that occurs naturally in soils across Australia. Historically, ochre has been used for artwork by many indigenous cultures, including the Aboriginal people of Australia.
The goal of ochRe
is to provide colour palettes inspired by Australian art, landscapes and wildlife. The palettes can be used in conjunction with ggplot2
or plot
to provide colours to data plots. There are 16 different palettes (at the moment!), each one based on an iconic Australian artwork, landscape or creature. Some palettes are more suitable for displaying qualitative data, others will look fabulous used in sequential plots. More information can be found in the vignette, including which palettes work best for those with impaired colour vision.
# load the ochRe vignette
vignette("ochre")
You can install ochRe
from github with:
# You need to install the 'devtools' package first
devtools::install_github("ropenscilabs/ochRe")
pal_names <- names(ochre_palettes)
par(mfrow=c(length(ochre_palettes)/2, 2), lheight = 2, mar=rep(1, 4), adj = 0)
for (i in 1:length(ochre_palettes)){
viz_palette(ochre_palettes[[i]], pal_names[i])
}
This is a basic example of how to use the namatjira_qual
palette in a plot.
library(ochRe)
library(ggplot2)
ggplot(diamonds) + geom_bar(aes(x = cut, fill = clarity)) +
scale_fill_ochre()
In this example we use the winmar
palette directly via the colorRampPalette()
function (for the base plot connoisseurs).
## basic example code
pal <- colorRampPalette(ochre_palettes[["winmar"]])
image(volcano, col = pal(20))
Individual palettes can be visualised using the viz_palette function
viz_palette(ochre_palettes[["tasmania"]])