Over the last year I have been doing some extensive editing and re-writing β of my main story Sixth Generation Cowboy and a Third Generation Whore; as well as various other stories recovered from my backup on an external hard drive. I have even been re-writing some of my stories that I thought were lost, but I had printed copies of them (or in some cases extensive notes).
In the modern USA it is supposedly an ideal that we not focus on skin color. At least it was in the last few decades of the 20th Century.
Sadly, skin colors have become a matter of contention in the 21st century π’
Skin color has always been a consideration for people of African ancestry. Not just Black or Brown, but the various shades. "Light Skins" sometimes "passed as Whites" for hundreds of years. Octoroons, and other people of "mixed blood" (shades of the Harry Potter novels) were at one time established by Law.
Skin color can be a defining characteristic. I have listened in on, and sometimes participated in discussions about the matter. Negro is still the term used by the US government, including the armed forces. Colored is an older term, there is Black, "Person of Color" and "African American" which might include Elon Musk, who was born in South Africa.
Variations of skin color, and even tone, are important in some places in Africa, because they indicate Tribal differences that are deadly serious, even now.
A significant percentage of Black people in the USA have immigrated from Africa since the 1960's. (Others from the Caribbean or elsewhere.) Tribalism is a matter of concern for many who have immigrated in the last 50 years. However, Black people who have born in the Western hemisphere for the last hundred years or more are unlikely to know their tribe of ancestry, nor even what part of Africa their ancestors came from. Many have family who are White, Latino, Cherokee, Korea, or from different parts of Africa.
Folks with no certainty of their bloodline, from Detroit, Chicago, New Orleans, Los Angeles, or Atlanta, often have strong opinions about other people's skin color. Most "Blacks" are shades of Brown, or even lighter tans.
These attitudes are important to people from the communities many of my characters come from. So, it is sometimes part of my stories.
I have extensive notes about my stories, so, often various characters attitudes and actions are influenced by things not explicitly written in the story.
Thus, when it may seem a trivial detail to mention one character has "mahogany" skin, and another is "caffee-latte" or whatever. I am foreshadowing a later conflict.
"Sometimes a Cigar is just a Cigar." Ebony, or, mocha, or russet, as well as porcelain, "peaches and cream" fair or pale, swarthy or dusky, etc. may just be a more colorful way of saying Black and White.
I have certain definitions in my mind. However, those who read my stories may have a different perception, or image in their mind. That's okay, because I am usually just trying to differentiate characters, similar to a "pug nose" "sharp cheekbones" "square jaw" or "broad shoulders" etc.
In my editing I noticed in my desire to use a more descriptive word than Black, I used mahogany and ebony to describe the same character. To some that may not matter, but to me at least, there are significant differences.
I found a website that has several good pages describing various skin colors and tones. Primarily for women's makeup, it also includes images of various actors and actresses.
I don't agree with all of the descriptions, or some are essentially identical. But it is a useful resource.
https://skincaregeeks.com/skin-tone-names/
I hope others might find these descriptions useful.
Comments from authors and readers about if they prefer a more descriptive effort, or just generic Black, Brown, or White?