This Academic Hood Colors List serves an              important function for your  set of graduation Academic Regalia (hood, tam, and gown). The regalia hood colors  typically include four sections: shell fabric, velvet edge, satin field, and satin chevron. The color of the velvet edge is  determined using this  official degree color chart. That velvet edge hood color, sometimes known as  Academic Regalia Inter-Collegiate Colors, represents your specific degree or             discipline. The satin field and chevron (the hood lining colors) represent your  university or college school colors. The  overall size and shape represents the type of degree: bachelor's, master's, or doctoral (with the narrow end getting progressively longer with the higher ranking degrees). Finally, the fabric shell color simply matches the fabric color of the graduation gown, which is usually black but sometimes is another color depending on the degree-granting institution. Associate degrees use a special cowl instead of a hood. 
        
    Below is the official academic regalia hood color list. Your academic hood colors are             ultimately the decision of your degree-granting institution and you.             However, these are the official academic regalia colors.
    See the footnote for PhD degrees,  rules regarding multiple degrees, and determining your field and chevron colors.
         
   
  
    * In determining your academic regalia colors, please             note the following: All PhD degrees (as opposed to Doctorate degrees)             use "PhD Blue", which is dark blue, in the academic colors.             For example, a Doctorate in Psychology would include in your academic             hood colors the color Gold, however a PhD in Psychology would use dark             blue. If you are unsure if your degree is a Doctorate or PhD, please             contact your administrative advisor to determine your precise degree             title and academic regalia hood colors.
    If you have multiple degrees, the rule is that you use only one hood, and only one degree/discipline color. You use the hood and color that represents your highest ranking degree (with Doctoral as highest, Masters as second highest, Bachelors as third highest, and Associate as the lowest). If you have two different degrees at the same highest ranking degree, you generally use the most recently awarded degree as your hood.
If you have an unlisted degree, there is no official color and it is dependant on the individual college or university to determine the color to be used for your hood. Typically, the most similar degree on the official chart is chosen. For example, if your degree is in an advance computer science field, usually the school chooses Science Gold for the degree color. 
    
 
  
    
Hood Lining Colors (Field and Chevron) 
  
  The  above list describes only your velvet colors. There are three  additional colors that typically go into your hood. They are the shell fabric (usually black, but sometimes the color of your robe if your robe is a  special color that your university uses), and the lining colors. 
  Hoods  are lined with the official color or colors of the college or  university conferring the degree. More than one color is shown by  division of the field color in a variety of ways. Most schools divide  the color by using a single chevron. Occasionally, a school might use  more than one chevron, no chevron but instead a single field color, an  equal division, a reverse chevron, a straight bar, or other methods. While Academic Apparel can make any variety of hood, please note that the online ordering system assumes a single field and a single standard chevron. For other unusual types of hoods, you will have to use our downloadable fax forms. 
    
   The official "Academic Costume Code and Academic Ceremony Guide"  includes a sentence that reads as follows: "The various academic  costume companies maintain complete files on the approved colors for  various institutions." 
  Once upon a time long ago, that  sentence was correct. However, that was before colleges started  springing up across the nation at a rapid rate in the last 50 years or  so, and before institutions started the practice of changing their hood  colors depending on style or taste or the desires of the student body  or economics for bulk manufacturing (sometimes even on a yearly basis). 
  We are the direct manufacturer of academic regalia.  This means one good thing and one bad thing  (from your perspective).  
  The  good thing is our prices are significantly lower than your  degree-granting university would charge to sell them to you, yet the  quality is the same or better than what they offer.  That's because we  are a relatively lean organization, independent, with over 60 years of experience, and we do not pay  sales representatives, or have retail stores, or have a large  advertising and marketing budget. 
  The  bad thing is we cannot keep up with the changes each university makes  to their regalia each year, and therefore require that our customers  make their own inquiries to their degree-granting universities to  discover what the current regalia colors are supposed to be for that  school before placing an order.
  We  suggest you find out in advance of ordering what your school colors  are, and which goes in the field and which goes in the chevron of the  hood. You might also ask the following additional information: 1) whether they use 6 or 8 sides for their tam (if you are buying a tam); 2) whether they use a tam or a mortarboard for a Master's degree (if you are inquiring about a master's gown regalia set); 3) whether  they use the standard black for the gown and hood shell color or if  they have a special color; 4) whether they use an embroidered school  emblem or symbol on the gown velvet an dif so what it looks like (these are fairly rare, but a few schools use them); 5) and if  there is anything special about the regalia not covered by those  questions.  
  Generally the best source  for this information is the University book store or student store. Someone at most  bookstores has all of this information. 
  You  should know that you have the right to purchase your gown from any  manufacturer, and not just the company that has a contract with your  university. By getting this information on your own and purchasing your  regalia from Academic Apparel, you will be saving money, and getting a regalia  set that looks at least as good as what your school offers, and often  it looks and feels significantly better than the bulk manufactured  chinese gowns many colleges are now selling (and ours will last longer than those gowns too). 
  While  we would really like to help you obtain this information, and hope to  some day send out surveys each year to each university asking for this  data, it is beyond our abilities to do so right now. If you are  willing to do the footwork to find this information out, we know you  will get a superb robe, hood, and tam from us, at prices that cannot be  beat.