COLOR SERIES: ISSUE ONE
The color wheel is made up of 6 colors.
3 Primary: Red, Blue, Yellow
3 Secondary: Green, Orange, Purple
Primary colors cannot be mixed from any combination of colors.
Secondary colors are combinations
of the primary colors.
Red and Yellow = Orange
Red and Blue = Purple
Blue and Yellow = Green
Complementary colors are opposite
colors on the color wheel.
Red and Green are Complements
Yellow and Purple are Complements
Orange and Purple are Complements
Orange and Blue are Complements
Yellow and Blue are Complements
Complementary colors work well together.
When used in an interior setting they
should be used in equal amounts and equal tone or intensity.
Harmonious colors are the colors
next to one another on the color wheel.
In the 1920’s Itten, who is affiliated
with the German Bauhaus movement, developed
the color star that included 12 colors.
Mixing two secondary colors together creates Tertiary Colors.
Shade
Adding white or black to a color
changes the shade of that color. For example: adding
white too red creates a pink, which is a shade of red.
An interior scheme made up of different
shades of the same color is a monochrome
color scheme.
Tone
Tone describes different gradations
of a color. There are warmer and cooler tones of a color.
For example: add green too blue and you have blue-green that is warmer or add
blue to purple
and create a blue-purple that is cooler.
The important concept to understand is every color has a different tone or undertone.
Many times the undertone does not
show itself on a single paint sample. It helps to see the
colors that come before and after the color on the paint chart. This will give
you a hint as to
what tone the color may take on.
Another way to see a color's undertone
is to put the color next to the other colors in the room.
You will then begin to see the undertone of a color.
Have you ever painted a room one
color and it turns out to be another? This is because all
colors have an undertone. Looking at an all white paint chart will help you
to visualize this
concept. They are all white but if you see them next to one another some appear
pink, yellow
even blue.
In issue two we will discuss the
effects' colors have on people.
For example: Green has a calming effect.
MAXEY HAYSE DESIGN STUDIOS, INC