eigengrau
noun·/ˈaɪ.ɡənˌɡraʊ/
The perceived dark gray of complete darkness, the color the eye and brain supply when no light reaches them. A native shade behind closed lids, darkness that feels like a presence, with texture rather than mere absence.
In the cabin with the lights out, eigengrau pooled in the corners, softer than black and strangely alive.
Etymology
From German Eigengrau, literally “own gray” (eigen “own” + grau “gray”). The coinage is precise and a little eerie: even darkness, it suggests, has a color that belongs to us.
Related Words
afterimagea visual residue that can tint darkness
scotopicpertaining to low-light vision
tenebrousdark, shadowy; more poetic than perceptual
qualiathe felt “what-it’s-like” of perception; a philosophical kin