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What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

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Page 1: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all
Page 2: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

What is color?• To have color there must be light.

• Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all color. – By placing light through a prism he produced a

rainbow of colors from the bending light rays.

Page 3: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

What is color?• All objects contain Pigments substances that

absorb some light rays and reflect others.

• When light strikes an object, you see only the colors that reflect or bounce back to your eyes.

• When light rays are absorbed , those colors are not seen.

• EX: blue fabric looks blue only because the blue rays are reflected and the fabric dye absorbs all other light rays along with their colors.

Page 4: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Color Wheel

•The color wheel is a system that places colors around a circle. •Placement on the wheel shows how different colors relate to each other.

Page 5: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Primary Colors

•Basic Colors from which all other colors are made.

•These 3 colors are equally spaced on the color wheel.

•They are Blue, Red, and Yellow.

Page 6: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Secondary Colors•Combining equal amounts of 2 primary colors creates a Secondary Color.

•These 3 colors appear halfway between the three primary colors.

•Blue + Yellow = Green•Blue + Red = Purple•Red + Yellow = ?

Page 7: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Intermediate Colors

•Combines a Primary Color with a neighboring Secondary Color

•Blue + Green = Blue-Green•Red + Orange = Red-Orange

•What are the other intermediate colors on the color wheel?

Page 8: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Warm Colors

•Include: orange, yellow, and red.

•Considered warm because of their association with warm objects such as the sun and fire.

•Also called “advancing colors” because they make objects appear larger or closer.

Page 9: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Cool Colors

•Include: green, blue, and violet.

•Associated with water, grass, and trees.

•Cool colors are also called “receding colors” because they make objects appear smaller and farther away.

Page 10: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Neutral Colors

•Include: white, black, and grey. •White is totally absent of color.•Black is a mixture of all colors.•Gray is a combination of white and black.

Page 11: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Color Variations• Adding white or black to a color changes its

VALUE.– A color that is lightened by adding white is called

a TINT.– A color that is darkened by adding black is called

a SHADE.

• INTENSITY is the brightness or dullness of a color.TINT

SHADE

Page 12: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Creating a color wheel

Page 13: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Creating a color scheme

• Knowing what colors work well together takes an understanding of color and the differences between the many values and intensities.

• Experts have identified several color schemes to use as guidelines.

• A Color Scheme is a plan for using a color or combination of colors.

Page 14: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Monochromatic

• Mono means “one”

• Chromatic refers to “color”

• A monochromatic color scheme uses the values and intensities of just one color.

Page 15: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all
Page 16: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Analogous

• Uses 2 or more colors that are next to each other on the color wheel.

• Colors blend better if they are close in value and intensity.

Page 17: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all
Page 18: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Complementary

• Combines direct opposites on the color wheel.

• Bold Effect- combine two colors of equal intensity.

• Soft Effect- using different values and intensities

Page 19: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all
Page 20: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Split-Complimentary

• One color used with the Two colors on each side of its direct compliment.

• Often found in plaid or print fabric.

• Easier to wear and not as bold as complimentary.

Page 21: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all
Page 22: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Triadic

• Three colors equally spaced on the color wheel

• The primary colors of red, blue, and yellow are one example.

Page 23: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all
Page 24: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Neutral• One, two, or three achromatic neutrals, may or

may not vary in the degree of warmness or coolness, lightness or darkness, brightness or dullness

• Possible colors: black and white, combination of browns

• Effect: vary in mood depending on the degree of light and dark value contrast– Are most effective if the degree of lightness or darkness

in your hair and/or skin coloring is repeated in the lightness or darkness of the clothing

Page 25: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all
Page 26: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Accented neutral

• One color added to other neutrals to form a scheme.

• Possible colors: black, white & red, browns with light blue

• Effect: draws attention to the one added hue

Page 27: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all
Page 28: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

COLOR• To maintain or decrease attention and apparent size,

to appear taller and slimmer– Cooler hues– Darker values– Duller intensities– Close contrasts

• To increase attention and apparent size, to appear shorter and heavier– Warmer hues– Lighter values– Brighter intensities– Strong contrasts

Examples: navy, khaki, grape, charcoal, mauve

Examples: shocking pink, pumpkin, tangerine, raspberry

Page 29: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

How to choose your colors pg. 167

Page 30: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Color Schemes Portfolio Pages

– Explain which colors are in the design, and where the colors are. Tell what color scheme is created by the colors.

– Explain the effect of the colors on the body.

– Describe the effect of the scheme, does it draw attention, or is it calming?

Two pictures of any two color schemes.

Page 31: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Color Schemes Portfolio Pages

Page 32: What is color? To have color there must be light. Sir Isaac Newton determined this fact in the mid-1600’s when he proved that light is the source of all

Color Schemes Portfolio Pages