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There are five different colors of the Album Spines: Red, Orange, Blue, Green and Yellow.
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Red and orange dominate the collection, while both blue and green are only available in three albums.
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The "Tintin and the Picaros" Album is the only one with a yellow spine.
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In Germany, for example, all of the comic spines are red.
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And in Spain all of them are yellow.
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Yet, China, Japan and many other countries follow the same pattern as the French language original with it's five different colors.
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But what do they mean?
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One thing that seems to make sense is that the color of the spine is of high contrast to the colors of the album's front cover.
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It is also noticeable that those comics with a similar front cover design often have the same spine color.
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Yet, the most plausible theory is that the colors come from the early albums that used cloth to bind the album spines
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which had no printing on them.
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Back then they had to use what colors were available, which were mainly red and orange.
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This explains the dominant spine colors for the Tintin albums.
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The colors decided for the final printed versions, including blue, green and yellow
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seems to be traced back to the collections publisher.
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Although a special pattern for the use of the colors seems unlikely.