Color
Secondary Hues
(1) Orange, green, and violet. (2) Colors created by mixing equal amounts of two primary colors.
Low-Key interiors
Focus on dark/low values. Can produce a stable, anchored, ponderous, or historic effect. An intellectual or research/reading mode or even a cave-like coziness or theatrical setting.
Tetrad Complements
Four Colors that are equidistant on the color wheel
M.E. Chevreul
French chemist, head of dyestuffs at Gobelin Tapestry, worked near Paris...Book: The Principles of Harmony and Contrast of Colors (best ever written on color)
Blacks and Off-Blacks
Give deep, dark value to the set-off neutrals - sharpening and adding richness to other colors placed next to it.
Cool Colors
Green, Blue-green, Blue, Blue-violet, and Violet
High Key Interiors
Have predominantly high value. Airy, carefree feeling occurs. Can seem romantic and less connected to the earth.
West Light
Hazy and Hot
Alternate Complements
Triad schemes with a direct complement of one of the hues
Depressed?
Vibrant colors lift the spirits
Warm Colors actually
Visually and psychologically warm the temperature of an interior. They are inviting, homey, optimistic, encouraging, and stimulating to the appetite
Subtractive Color Theory
When natural or artificial light hits a colored object, all of the spectral wave bands are absorbed or "subtracted" except the hues that are pigmented, painted or dyed.
Color Samples
Won't give the effect you will want when you have a whole room that color.
Yellow
is naturally very light and has the lightest natural saturation point
Color is a
property of light.
Principles of Design
scale proportion balance rhythm emphasis harmony
Elements of Design
space shape form mass line texture pattern light color
Light and Dull or Neutralized colors
Produce feelings of calm and relaxation
Light Value and Bright Colors
Produce feelings of spontaneity and happiness
Philosophy of Color - Retail Businesses
1) Stimulating, warm, cheerful, and advancing colors are often used in large stores and shopping malls 2) Glitter and neon-bright colors used to appeal to youth 3) Subtle, deep-value tones and neutralized pastels with polished wood and metal give exclusive or rich appearance 4) White, neutrals, and neutralized hues foram a background for colorful merchandise
How to Pick Paint
1) Pick paint color from paint deck 2) Paint large swatches of two or three colors on wall 3) Look at the paint vertically. Look at how the light will hit the paint. 4) Choose several paint chips to decide on the one color in home.
Color consultants
1) Provide specific consulting services for groups or manufacturers 2) Select colors for a wide variety of products 3) Provide schemes for entire interiors 4) Specify colors for architectural projects
Philosophy of Color - Medical Facilities
1) Soft or neutralized colors in a variety of values - from dark to light 2) Use of carpet, warm wood textures, and fire-proof fabric or wall coverings
Cool Colors
1) Calm and relax the mind and body 2) Givie the impression of lack of pressure and plenty of time to wait or to accomplish tasks 3) Suggest more formaility and precision of detail, pattern, and color 4) Expand space 5) Subdue appetite and emotions
Philosophy of Color - Hospitality Facilities
1) Lavish colors and patterns 2) Red and orange-related hues are found to be the most stimulating to the appetite 3) In warm climates, cooler colors are often used 4) In cool climates, warmer colors are often used
Philosophy of Color - Production Plants
1) Light pastel colors that reflect light 2) Cheerful colors influence workers to be cheerful 3) Productivity is increased by eliminating eye fatigue caused by afterimages, stark whites, glossy surfaces. Use Matte or Dull surfaces 4) Primary colors are used to identify controls to increase efficiency and enhance safety
Analogous Colors Formula
60% Main Color + 30% Secondary Color + 10% Accent Color (Suit/Shirt/Tie Proportions)
Analogous harmonies
A color harmony of three or four colors that are adjacent on the color wheel. the similarity of analogous colors tends to produce a calm relaxed feeling in an artwork ex: yellow, yellow-orange and orange
Tones
A hue mixed with either a small quantity of gray or the complement of the hue, resulting in dulling the hue.
Albert H. Munsell Theory
A precise, formula-based system for notating specific colors
Shibusa
A theory of harmonizing color so that combined hues are appealing for a long period of time. Based on ratios and proportions of nature.
Grays
Achieved by mixing various amounts of black and white, which makes true achromatic grays
Warm Colors (Red Orange Yellow)
Active, Fun, Stimulating
Season and climate
Affect color. Winter = Fewer warm wavelengths...Summer - has more wavelengths
Afterimage
An image (usually a negative image) that persists after stimulation has ceased
Dark and Dull or Neutralized Colors
Are serious and profound
Monochromatic
Black/White/Grays + Neutrals + One Color
Texture and Materials
Catch, absorb, and reflect light. Changes colors depending on the light.
Simultaneous Contrast
Changes in perceived hue that occur when a colored stimulus is displayed on backgrounds of various colors
East light
Clear and bright
North light
Clear and cool
Warm Fluorescent Lighting
Closer to Full-spectral energy distribution light
As light changes,
Color changes
Pigments or Dystuffs
Colored chemical compounds, including natural compounds in the earth, that absorb light; A compound that is a coloring agent for paint, ink, crayons and chalk. a nonsoluable coloring matter that is held onto the surface of the fabric with a resin binder
Spectral Light
Colored light inherent in nature
Hue Identity
Colors can be persuaded by other colors.
Spectral Colors
Colors that become visible when white light passes through a prism: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
South Light
Constant and warm
Split Complements
Contain a base hue and the two colors on each side of its direct complement - yellow, red-violet and blue-violet
Fluorescent LIghting
Contains more cool spectral colors than warm
Incandescent Lighting
Contains more warm wavelengths than cool
Combustion Lighting
Contains more warm wavelengths, although the flickering quality is generally darker, making colors appear darker.
Shades
Dark value of a color made by adding black
Pastels
Lightened tones or tints of tones made by adding white. They are dull or "dirty' and livable as wall colors - rich but nonassertive
Shibushi
Like Frank Loyd Wright - Based on nature with intense colors as accents and tons of texture
Artificial Lighting
In some forms nearly full spectrum
Color Deficiency
Inability to distinguish value (light and dark) or pairs of complements one from another, frequently red and green
Chroma
Intensity - the relative brightness vs. the dullness - the amount of pure chroma in a given hue
Color
Is most changed by light.
High Contrast
Light and dark values are used to give a sharp or bold contract, precision, drama, or excitement and a clean contemporary scheme. Look professional - No nonsense
High Values
Light hues (tints and pastels) or light achromatics. They visually expand space and are useful when walls, floors, or ceilings need to seem farher away
Tints
Light value of a color made by adding white
International Colour Authority
Meet in the spring and fall in London, where forecasts emerge from international members' panels on bothhome furnishings and apparrel. Reports given on trend development and forecasted color use.
Irritable? Use
Nature's greens
The color wheel has
No neutrals, No black or white
Bold or High-Contrast Colors
Often in retail design and fast-food places. Sense of hurrying is seen.
Subtractive Color Mixing
Optical Color Mixing - Colors placed near one another are visually mixed in a way, which allows us to physically see or interpret colors other than spectral colors.
Spectral Energy Distribution Factor
Orientation or Direction of natural light
Direct Complement Colors
Pairs exactly opposite - red and green; yellow and violet blue and orange...or blue-green and red-orange
Standard Color-Wheel Theory
Palette theory, Prang theory, David Brewster color theory; color circle...Based on three primary colors (red, yellow, and blue) and the variations derived by mixing these, plus black and white. Colors are arranged in a circle, with secondary and tertiary or intermediate colors placed between the primary colors.
Cool Colors (Blue Green Violets)
Peaceful, Calm, Dramatic, Receding
Value distribution based on nature
Placing of values in the general pattern seen in nature. Dark colors on bottom, midtones in middle.
Ostwald Theory
Plotted as triangular pages with hues varied not by chroma but by the amount of black and white.
Warm Colors
Red-violet, red, red-orange, orange, yellow-orange, yellow and yellow-green
Dark or Low Values
Shades and darker tones that close in space. Give warmth feeling.
Tertiary Hues
Six hues made by mixing a primary and a secondary hue...Yellow-orange, red-orange, red-violet, blue-violet, blue-green, and yellow-green
Dark Values and Bright Chroma (Jewel Tones)
Suggest Richness and Strength
Complementary Colors
The Colors opposite each other on the color wheel
Metamerism
The apparent change in color from one light to another
Hue
The color name
Undertones
The colors that are added to a base hue
Orientation
The direction of natural light, means a slant to the spectrum that affects the way colors appear
Neutrals
The families of whites and off-whites, grays, and blacks and off-blacks.
Value
The lightness or darkness of the hue
Law of Chromatic Distribution
The more neutralized colors of the scheme are found in the largest areas, and the smaller the area, the brighter or more intense the chroma becomes.
Full-spectrum Light
all the wavelengths of the visible energy bands seen on a clear, cloudless day.
Browns and beiges
are also often considered neutrals, even though they are actually neutralized colored hues.
Mid-tones
are colors at their normal value or natural saturation point. Give a sense of normality and calm evoking less reaction and are safe, stable, and easy to live with
Browns and Beiges
are often favored because of the warm qualities that they bring to an interior
Off-whites
are produced by adding other neutrals (gray, black, brown) to white or by mixing color and neutrals into white.
Whites and off-whites
give interior increased visual space
Color-group Moods
groups of color that produce emotional response
Violet
has the darkest natural saturation point
Achromatic
having no hue
Monochromatic
having or appearing to have only one color
Neutrals have all of
the colors that are not on the Color Wheel. So yellow is not a neutral.
Visual Acuity
the degree of detail the eye can discern in an image, including the differences in color
Value distribution
the utilization or placement of value for a desired result
Double Complements
two pairs of direct complements that are adjacent or next to each other
Color placement of hues in juxtaposition - or close together -
will cause colors to affect one another