Color Theory key Terms
Hue:
Any color in its purest form, lacking shade or tint.
Pure Color:
Color that has absolutely no other combined with it.
Tertiary Colors:
Colors created by mixing a primary color with a secondary color.
Secondary Colors:
Colors created using an equal mixture of two primary colors: orange, green and violet.
Desaturated Colors:
Colors mixed with white and located toward the inner ring of the color wheel; they contain a large amount of gray and very little remaining pure color. They are often considered neutral.
Analogous Colors:
Colors that are located directly next to each other on the color wheel.
Neutral Colors:
Colors that do not complement or contrast any other color. Examples include brown and gray.
Complementary Colors:
Colors that fall directly across from each other on the color wheel.
Shade:
Colors that result when black is added to another color.
Tone:
Colors that result when gray is added to another color.
Tint:
Colors that result when white is added to another color.
Cool Colors:
Colors that suggest coolness; they are dominated by blues, greens. violets, and blue-reds.
Warm Colors:
Range for colors from yellow and gold through oranges, red-oranges, most reds, and even some yellow-greens.
Primary Colors:
Red, Yellow, and blue; the basis of all other colors.
Harmony:
The existence of unity in a design; it is the most important of all artistic principles.
Saturation:
The pureness of a color or the dominance of a hue in a color.