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Abstract CP-1 defines Chromapin as the reversible field anchor through which stabilized relational and civic fields become softly addressable within an ambient system. Where RFL-1 established that repeated shared presence can stabilize into relational field, RFL-2 showed how such fields synchronize into aura, chroma, rails, agents, and chrono, WSC-1 isolated the operators that make such synchronization distributable and temporally legible, RFL-3 described convergence into shared social field, RFL-4 described civic emergence in public space, RFL-5 described cross-scale civilizational coordination, and RFL-6 described the softening of institutions, CP-1 identifies the next problem: a field may exist, a field may stabilize, and a field may guide, but it still requires a minimal landing unit if it is to become interactable without collapsing into old symbolic systems. Chromapin solves this by defining a bounded, reversible anchoring layer that preserves field continuity while enabling soft return, reference, placement, and addressability. A chromapin is therefore not a chat object, location pin, wearable assistant, memory archive, map point, or profile token. It is a field anchor. CP-1 thus formalizes the transition from stabilized field to softly addressable field presence, and claims a reversible field anchoring architecture in which stabilized relational or civic fields may become softly addressable through bounded anchor units without requiring identity-first storage, symbolic archive, persistent profiles, map-point logic, wearable assistant mediation, or extractive behavioral retention.