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Abstract This paper introduces the Chromatic Signals Stack, building on CC-1 and the Sidecar positioning paper, which together position color as a low-entropy carrier of state parallel to symbolic storage. It consists of two public demonstration layers: CR₁, Chromatic Reasoning, which maps short utterances into first-glance chromatic state through color-form, utterance aura, and residency field; and CW₁, Chromatic Wheel, which compresses long-form text into a chromatic field signature, including dominant field, temporal modulation, attractor detection, binary detection, binary pull, and cycle mode. The core claim is that color can function as a state-first semantic layer prior to symbolic detail. Rather than treating color as decoration, mood styling, or auxiliary metadata, this stack treats color as a low-entropy field carrier that communicates condition, relevance, urgency, infrastructural modulation, and relational tone at first glance. CR₁ demonstrates this principle at the utterance scale. A sentence such as a check-in, proposal, care event, repair event, or knowledge request is rendered into a compact chromatic sidecar composed of trace segments, aura, residency field, semantic family, and formula-like compression. CW₁ demonstrates the same principle at the corpus scale. It renders long-form text as a 360-degree chromatic field signature and allows public text to be read as a field climate rather than only as symbolic content. Together, these two layers establish a public stack in which short utterances become chromatic state, long-form corpora become chromatic field distribution, and infrastructural meaning can be carried at first glance without reducing the system to profile capture, sentiment scoring, or purely symbolic dashboards. The novelty of this stack lies not in using color alone, but in formalizing color as a semantic compression layer spanning utterance, environment, and public discourse.