“…If the pitch, p, is on the order of visible light wavelengths, the selective reflection gives these short-pitch CLCs striking iridescent colours. While liquid crystals were studied in spherical shape very soon after their discovery [2], with a number of seminal works published also in the 1970s-1990s [3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10], not least in connection to polymer-dispersed liquid crystals [11], the success of liquid crystals in the flat panel display industry has for a quite long time set a paradigm in which liquid crystals are studied primarily in a flat sample geometry. This is today changing and curved geometries like droplets, cylinders or shells are now drawing more attention [12,13] (and references therein), due to the many interesting effects arising from confinement within one (droplet) or two (shell) self-closing surfaces.…”