Colour
Colour
Colour
1.
Advancing colour
2.
Artifical colour
3.
Colour contrasts
4.
Colour family
(Chromaticity)
Colours that don't really stand out against each other belong
to the same colour family.
5.
Colour Perspective
6.
Colour to colour
contrast
7.
Colour wheel
8.
Complementary
contrast
9.
Cool colours
10.
Decorative colour
11.
Expressive colours
12.
Functional colour
13.
Light - Dark
contrast
14.
Light colour
15.
Local colour
16.
Luminescence
(Brightness)
17.
Material colour
18.
Natural colour
19.
Optical colour
mixing
In an optical mix, the colours are not blended out but set
side-by-side in tiny points or dots. Because the dots are so
small, together they seem like mixed colours. In the late
19th century, artists developed this technique because they
thought it would make colours of their paintings more
intense and lighter. The optical mix technique led to the
creation of pointillism.
20.
Pastel colour
21.
Primary colours
22.
Saturated colours
These are pure colours with, they are not mixed with other
colours and the colour is at its most colourfulness. ex.: If you
would add any more red dye (pigment) to red colour it would
not get any redder.
23.
Schematic colour
24.
Secondary colours
25.
Symbolic colours
Tertiary colours
Wine red, khaki and army green are tertiary colours. You get
them either by mixing three primary colours, or by taking a
primary colour and adding a little black or grey to the mix.
Tertiary colours are unsaturated (un-pure) colours.
27.
Unsaturated
colours
28.
Warm - Cold
contrast
29.
Warm colours