About Color.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Assignment: Color and Value Painted Value Scale Painted Color Value Scale Op Art Color Value Scale Color Wheel.
Advertisements

Color.
Color Isaac Newton passed a beam of sunlight through a prism and this resulted in a patch of colors on a white piece of paper. He called this spread of.
The Colour of Light & The Colour of Objects. Colour by Addition Sir Isaac Newton first discovered that visible (white) light was made up of many colours.
Visible Light and Color
CP Physics Mr. Miller. General Information  Sir Isaac Newton – first to realize white light composed of different colors  Prisms – separate white light.
Chapter Twenty-Five: Light 25.1 Properties of Light 25.2 Color and Vision 25.3 Optics.
The Elements of Design: Color
Additive Primary Colors and Subtractive Primary Colors
Do Now: What is this?. Other types of Color Wheels.
Chapter 28 Color. Spectrum: The spread of colors seen when light is passed through a prism or diffraction gradient.
1 Light. 2 Visible Light Wavelengths range from 400 nm to 700 nm Longest wavelength = red Shortest wavelength = violet 1 nm = 1 x m.
25.2 The human eye The eye is the sensory organ used for vision.
Color. Color Wheel includes primary, secondary, and tertiary colors.
COLOR THEORYCOLOR THEORY. Pigment vs. Light pigments - "subtractive." Red, blue and yellow can create all the colors of the color wheel. (paint, pigments)
Color and Vision General Physics. Band of Visible Light ROYGBIV (Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet)
Now let’s focus on… The visible spectrum The visible spectrum –Light and pigment.
COLOR.
Lesson 2. Review - Energy in a Wave A wave is a disturbance that transfers energy from one point to another without transferring matter. In a water wave,
COLOR PHYSICS By Camri Mason. THE DISCOVERY Newton was the 1 st person to discover the spectrum. His experiment consisted of the a triangular prism, white.
UNDERSTANDING COLOR GOING BEYOND THE SPECTRUM. THE SPECTRUM Sir Isaac Newton was one of the first scientists to investigate color theory. Around
Unit 3: Color Theory Color plays a big role in art from creating certain moods and feelings to developing more interesting compositions. Understanding.
COLOR THEORY Color is the eye’s response to the visual spectrum from red to violet. Different colors in the spectrum are created by different wavelengths.
Color Element of Art.
Light & Electromagnetic Radiation Ch. 19. Electromagnetic Radiation Electromagnetic waves are transverse waves created by the motion of electrically charged.
COLORSCOLORSCOLORSCOLORS Ms. Gill’s Art Class COLOR Element of art comprising hues produced through the reflection of light to the eye.
ColorColor. The Color Spectrum Isaac Newton passed a narrow beam of sunlight through a triangular-shaped glass prism showed that sunlight is composed.
Light and Color. An objects color depends on the wavelength of light it reflects and that our eyes detect. White light is a blend of all colors. When.
The Visible Spectrum And how we see it. What is Visible Light? The cones in the eye are only sensitive to a narrow range of EM frequencies. Visible Light.
Hue Do You Think Hue Are?. The Properties of Color There are three fundamental properties by which color is characterized: hue, value and chroma.
Electromagnetic Waves and Color. Color Color is the perceptual quality of light. Color is the perceptual quality of light. The human eye can distinguish.
Standard: Explain how the human eye sees objects and colors in terms of wavelengths What am I learning today? How are wavelengths detected by the human.
Additive & Subtractive Digital Color
Section 4 Color.
Color theory.
THE COLOUR WHEEL COLOUR SCHEMES COLOUR AND VALUE
WHITE LIGHT?  The white light from the sun is made up of different colors.  White light contains all the colors of the visible spectrum. 
The Color Spectrum
The Color Wheel Shaida Morales.
Color & Color Schemes.
COLOR THEORY Color is the eye’s response to the visual spectrum from red to violet. Different colors in the spectrum are created by different wavelengths.
25.2 The human eye The eye is the sensory organ used for vision.
What you should know about light!!
Color Vocabulary.
COLOR THEORY.
What color are these paint chips?
How We See Color.
EQ: How does light interact with matter?
Why does a blue shirt look blue?
Polarization Polarized light—light waves that vibrate in a single plane Polaroid filters block one plane of light waves.
How do we see Colour?.
18.1: Light Key concepts: What happens to the light that strikes an object? What determines the color of an opaque, transparent, or translucent object?
What Is Color Vocabulary.
Chapter 12 COLOR THEORY.
Get out pencil and your sketchbook to take some notes.
Light and the Electromagnetic Spectrum
Color.
How would you describe the color RED to a person who cannot see?
Color Unit Test Review What is Color? Physiology
Colour theory.
Color Wheel.
Color Theory.
An Overview of the Element of Colour
Color Theory Notes What is a Theory?.
Primary and secondary There are two theories about how we can organize the different colours. Physicists explain color as a function of light. This is.
Color And Light.
Chapter 14: Light Section 2: Light and Color
This student is looking at many colors on his computer screen
Anand Muthiah Jee Park Miranda Yoo
More on The visible Spectrum
Presentation transcript:

About Color

What is Color? How do We See Colors? Reflection of light Rods/Cones Colors in Pigment (paint) Subtractive Complementary Colors Warm/Cool Color in Light Additive TV/Computer/Phones Can be Mixed

What is Color? How humans perceive color depends on the interplay of three elements: the nature of the light, the reflective properties of an object, and the ways in which our retina and visual cortex process light waves Pure white light, such as sunlight, is composed of the visible colors. Sir Isaac Newton discovered this in 1666 by passing a beam of light through a prism.

Newton observed that color is not inherent in objects Newton observed that color is not inherent in objects. Rather, the surface of an object reflects some colors and absorbs all the others. We perceive only the reflected colors. When light waves strike an object in nature, the object can transmit, absorb, or reflect various individual light waves, depending on the nature of the object and its atomic structure.

Cones are sensitive to different wavelengths of light Cones are sensitive to different wavelengths of light. 5-6 million cones in each eye give the brain enough information to interpret colors. There are three types of cones, each sensitive to a different wavelength-this allows color vision The actual wavelength that the cones are most sensitive to are commonly labeled "red" "green“ and "blue". Rods transmit mostly black and white information to the brain. There are over 120 million of them in each eye. Rods are very sensitive to light, and allow us to see under very low level of illumination. They give us our night vision, in the shades of white, gray and black. How we see Color Retina is covered by millions of light- sensitive cells, some shaped like rods and some like cones.

Rods say that these boxes are the same, cones say they are different. Complementary colors “vibrate” because the brain is receiving opposite signals from the eyes. Rods say that these boxes are the same, cones say they are different.

Claude Monet, Impression, soleil levant (grayscale)

Cool colors came from blue hues, such as blue, green and violet. Warm colors are made up of the red hues, such as red, orange, yellow.

Additive primary colors Colors of Light RGB and its subset CMY form the most basic and well-known color model. Red, green and blue are the additive primary colors of the color spectrum. Additive color systems start without light. Light sources of various wavelengths combine to make a color.  (Adding colors of light together.) Additive primary colors

The most common examples of this are television, computer and phone screens. By mixing together various amounts of red, green and blue light, you can make almost any color.

Pigment Colors Primary colors theoretically cannot be mixed from any other colors. Secondary colors are a combination of any two adjacent primary colors. Intermediate (Tertiary) colors are a combination of adjacent primary and secondary colors in color wheel. Color Wheel

A subtractive color model explains the mixing of paints, dyes, and inks to create a full range of colors, each caused by subtracting (that is, absorbing) some wavelengths of light and reflecting the others. The color that a surface displays depends on which colors of the white light are reflected by it and therefore made visible. (Subtracting colors out of visible light.)

So if we see a green car what does that mean? It means the color that’s being scattered off the surface is green, and all the other colors are being absorbed into the surface.