Advanced Art Color Theory
Advanced Art Color Theory
•
Why Color?
Color Theory is a science and art unto itself. Some artists
and designers spend their entire careers as color
consultants. The principles are simple to understand, but in
painting, they are pretty darn complicated in practice. As
the saying goes, “If painting were easy, lots of people would
be doing it.” In math we learn first to count, then to add and
subtract, and eventually we get to calculus. If we use that
as a metaphor, we could say portraiture is trigonometry and
color theory is arithmetic.
Why Color?
• Primary Colors
Are:
Red
Blue
Yellow
• They make up all
other colors you see
• And they can not be
made.
THE COLOR WHEEL
Secondary Colors: are
made by mixing equal
amounts of two primary
colors.
Orange (red + yellow)
Violet (red + blue)
Green (yellow + Blue)
•
THE COLOR WHEEL
TERTIARY COLORS
Definition: is also called intermediate color is formed
when a primary color is mixed with an adjacent
secondary color - for instance, blue (a primary) is
mixed with violet (a secondary) to produce blue-violet
•
THE COLOR WHEEL
Intermediate Colors
Also called the Tertiary
colors. They are the
"two-name colors"
yellow orange, red
orange, yellow green,
blue green, red violet,
and blue violet. They are
created by mixing a
primary to its closest
secondary.
3 PROPERTIES OF EVERY
COLOR
• HUE
• VALUE
• INTENSITY
SO…
Turn and think then talk to your neighbor.
Take 30 seconds……...
QUICK Write down two
WAYS YOU CAN MAKE A COLOR LESS INTENSE?
● Cooler
● Duller
● Lighter in value
The monochromatic
color scheme uses
variations in lightness
and saturation of
a single color within the
Color Wheel. This color
scheme gives the feeling
of simplicity, elegance,
and cleanliness. Claude Monet, Rouen and Paris, 1894
MONOCHROMATIC COLOR
SCHEME & POLYCHROMATIC
•
THE COMPLEMENTARY COLOR SCHEME
• Complementary color
schemes are tricky to
use in large doses, but
work well when you
want something to stand
out.
• Complementary colors
are really bad for text
THE COMPLEMENTARY COLOR SCHEME
• If you mix complementary colors you will dull a color make
it less intense. If you keep mixing them you can produce a
neutral color like brown or gray.
•
SPLIT COMPLEMENTARY COLOR
The split-complementary
color scheme is a variation of
the complementary color scheme.
In addition to the base color, it uses
the two colors adjacent to its
complement. This color scheme
has the same strong visual contrast
as the complementary
color scheme, but has less
tension.
SPLIT COMPLEMENTARY COLOR
=
ANALOGOUS COLOR SCHEMES