Color Theory Vocabulary Winter 2016
Saturation
(Chroma, Intensity) - how pure/diluted the color is (brightness)
Color wheel
A circle in which the primary, secondary, and intermediate hues (colors) are arranged in orderly intervals.
Dye
A color agent, gets absorbed into the surface, and is soluble.
Pigment
A color agent, will stay on the surface, absorbs light, and is durable.
Analogous colors
A color scheme that uses hues next to each other on the color wheel.
Secondary colors
A hue created by combining two primary colors. (orange, green, violet)
Tone
A hue mixed with grey
Hue
A particular shade of a given color
Cyan
A turquoise color (often called process blue) that is one of the four inks in a four-color process.
Adobe Color CC (Formerly known as Adobe Kuler)
A web page/Photoshop extension that allows you to create color schemes, browse other users color schemes, save them, and import them into Adobe programs such as Photoshop and Illustrator.
RGB
Abbreviation of primary colors for additive color (Computer monitors, TV, etc.)
CMYK
Abbreviation of primary colors for printing
Chroma
Another term for saturation or brightness of a color. It can define the purity of a hue and it color's strength. Adding values of gray to the hues.
Triadic
Any 3 colors equally distanced apart make an equilateral triangle
Tetrad
Any 4 colors equally distanced apart make a rectangle
Shade
Any hue that has been mixed with black
What color is created when all color is absorbed?
Black
Printer color
Can be the same as the four color process, but newer printers use seven colors instead of four.
Discord
Colors in conflict
Complimentary colors
Colors opposite on the color wheel
Cool colors
Colors suggesting coolness; blue, green, violet and their variants.
Warm colors
Colors suggesting warmth: reds, yellows, and oranges and their variants.
Munssell Wheel
Consists a twenty-step partitive color wheel out of the center corresponding to the five primary (yellow, red, green, blue and violet) and five secondary colors and ten tertiary colors.
Munsell Color Tree
Consists of ten vines that project out of the center corresponding to the five primary (yellow, red, green, blue and violet) and five secondary colors. The tree also has intervals of values, measuring the lightness and darkness of a hue. O is black and 10 is white.
Process Wheel
Contains a twelve-step subtractive color wheel which includes the three primary (yellow, magenta and cyan), secondary (orange, violet and green) and six tertiaries colors ( yellow-orange, red, red-violet-red, blue-violet-blue, green-blue-green and yellow green). Used for inks and computer cartridges.
What color scheme includes the colors: Green, Blue-violet, and Blue
Cool Colors
Tint
Created when white is added to a color.
Additive Colors
Creating color by creating light (light waves) (Computer monitors, TV, etc.)
Subtraction color
Creating color from paint - absorbs and reflect light waves
Monochromatic
Different tints and shades of one color (hue).
Black (What does it symbolize?)
Formality, Death, Evil
Color perspective
Illusion of space via color - with saturation, value, temperature
Aerial perspective
Includes color perspective, atmospheric perspective, detail, pattern
After image
Is the optical reaction that occurs after we stare intensely at a hue. The brain supplies the opposite or complementary hue.
Color Mixing
Knowledge of the way colors interact when we combine them and what new colors are created when we do.
Pink (What does it symbolize?)
Love, Affection, Femininity
Medium
Material you mix in with paint to give it consistency. (Make it thicker, glossy, etc.)
Vehicle
Material you mix with pigment and dyes to make paint. (Acrylic, Gouache, Oil, Wax, etc.)
Split Compliment
Once color plus two colors that are on either side of its compliment or on the color wheel
Tertiary colors
Primary color mixed with adjacent secondary color on the color wheel (yellow orange for example)
Red Yellow Blue
Primary colors for subtractive (paint)
Primary colors
Pure or fundamental colors (red,yellow, and blue) that cannot be created by combining other colors.
White (What does it symbolize?)
Purity
Chiaroscuro
Rendering with Dark on Light and vice-versa.
Purple (What does it symbolize?)
Royalty, magic/mystical, imagination, spirituality
Characteristics of Color
Saturation, Value, & Hue
Color interaction
Simultaneous Contrast
Color Picker
The Adobe Photoshop utility that allows you to click on a color to select it, view if it is web safe/print safe, and see the RGB, CMYK, and HEX values for the color.
Value
The darkness or lightness of a color.
Pantone Matching System
The industry standard used by graphic designers for selecting/matching colors. Abbreviated as "PMS"
Psychology of Color
The principle of color evoking understanding and emotion. Explains how color can be used to set the tone and mood.
four color process
The process that printers use
Color Space
The three-dimensional space; describes the set of all colors.
Light Wheel
This is a six step additive consisting of three primary colors (green, red and blue)
Pigment Wheel
This is a twelve step subtractive color wheel which include three primaries (yellow, red and blue) secondary (orange, violet and green, and six tertiaries ( yellow-organe, red-orange, red-violet, blue-violet, blue-green, and yellow-green). The reaction of pigmented colors when they are mixed.
How will changing from RGB to CMYK affect an image?
This will dull/mute the colors in the image
Glaze
Transparent layer of paint
Blue (What does it symbolize?)
Trust, Honesty, Loyalty
When creating a design for a client, you should always....
Use colors that will communicate your clients spirit or personality.
Monochromatic
Varying in intensity and value of a single color
Tertiary color
What you get when you mix a secondary and primary color together.
Tones
What you get when you mix compliments. (Neutral)
What color is created when all color is reflected?
White
Neutral colors
White, black and gray (sometimes brown). Used to make tints and shades but do not affect hue.
Contrast
comparison of differences
Key color
dominant color in composition
Harmony
family of colors capable of being used as a basis of composition (organize colors)
Split compliment
instead of using the actual compliment, you use a color alongside to the actual compliment
Tonality
overall color feeling of picture