What’s in a Colour?
Where did this whole pink and blue thing start? There are several renditions depending on the culture. Before 1920 all children in European countries were dressed in either blue or white as these were the available colours. At the turn of the century, boys were dressed in pink and girls in blue because pink was considered the ‘stronger colour.’ Blue was associated with calmness and purity while pink was related to the more aggressive and active red.
There have been several studies around the world that have asked what colour boys and girls�prefer. Many studies have concluded that boys gravitate towards the colours on the blue end of the spectrum while girls tend to stick to the red end. However, is this innate or is this due to being brought up in a society that teaches these colour boundaries?
Dressing Your Boy in Pink
The good news today is that most people are a little more open to all colours on children. If you do decide to dress your baby boy in pink, then so what? Good for you. Furthermore, if your boy does decide he likes the colour pink and chooses to wear pink on his first day of school, then does it really matter? As long as it doesn’t matter to him, then it shouldn’t matter to you either. If your boy chooses to dress in pink this doesn’t mean he will be a gender confused individual. This is the same as if your daughter decides she wants to play with race cars. It is important for everyone to let go of these stereotypes and to let children be, regardless of what colour they like.
Of course, it can be hard to explain this to a child. When your son comes home from school in tears because the boys teased him for wearing his favourite pink shirt, then what can you say? Be honest. Let him know that pink is often associated with girls but this doesn’t mean it is a girl colour.� Don’t be afraid to step outside the colour boundary and let your child choose what colours�they do and don’t like themselves.

Responses to “Is Pink The New Blue?”
Yes I couldn’t agree more. My little boy loves purple and pink! Why should he be told “no you can’t have pink”
My husband and son wore pink in the 1980’s it was common to see boys in pink. Billabong also made pink T Shirts and cord shorts. My son won best teen model when he was 13yrs. And wore pink linen trousers, pink shirt, grey bow tie and comber bun to escort the older girls on the cat walk. Would dress a baby boy in pink but i do buy all my boy G’sons silver bangles.