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The Color Wheel Shaida Morales.

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Presentation on theme: "The Color Wheel Shaida Morales."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Color Wheel Shaida Morales

2 RGB Color Wheel RGB (Red, Green, and Blue) refers to a system for representing the colors to be used on a computer display. RGB is considered an additive color system, which involve the mixing of colored light. What is RGB RGB (red, green, and blue) refers to a system for representing the colors to be used on a computer display. Red, green, and blue can be combined in various proportions to obtain any color in the visible spectrum. Levels of R, G, and B can each range from 0 to 100 percent of full intensity.  ADDITIVE COLOR involves the mixing of colored light. The colors on a television screen are a good example of this. Additive primary colors are red, green and blue.

3 Primary Colors Primary Colors are the root of every other hue imaginable. For the RGB color system, red, green, and blue are the primary colors. Primary Colors are the root of every other hue imaginable. The primary pigments used in the manufacture of paint come from the pure source element of that Hue. There are no other pigments blended in to alter the formula.

4 RYB Color Wheel RYB (Red, Yellow, Blue) is a color coding system that is typically used in the manufacturing of paint. RYB is considered to be a subtractive color system, which involve the mixing of colored paints, pigments, inks and dyes. What is RYB RYB is a color coding system that is based off of Red Yellow and Blue. This system is typically used in the manufacturing of paint. SUBTRACTIVE COLOR involves the mixing of colored paints, pigments, inks and dyes. The traditional subtractive primary colors are red, yellow and blue.

5 Primary Colors In paint pigments, pure Yellow, pure Red, and pure Blue are the only hues that can’t be created by mixing any other colors together.  In theory, the Primary Colors are the root of every other hue imaginable. Think of the three Primaries as the Parents in the family of colors. In paint pigments, pure Yellow, pure Red, and pure Blue are the only hues that can’t be created by mixing any other colors together. 

6 Secondary Colors When you combine any two of the Pure Primary Hues, you get three new mixtures called Secondary Colors. Yellow + Red = ORANGE Red + Blue = VIOLET Blue + Yellow = GREEN When you combine any two of the Pure Primary Hues, you get three new mixtures called Secondary Colors. Think of the three Secondaries as the Children in the family of colors. Yellow + Red = ORANGE Red + Blue = VIOLET or PURPLE Blue + Yellow = GREEN

7 Tertiary Colors Primary color + its nearest secondary color = six new mixtures called tertiary colors Red + Orange = RED-ORANGE Yellow + Orange = YELLOW-ORANGE Yellow + Green = YELLOW-GREEN Blue + Green = BLUE-GREEN Blue + Violet = BLUE-VIOLET Red + Violet = RED-VIOLET When you mix a Primary and its nearest Secondary on the Basic Color Wheel you create six new mixtures called Tertiary colors. Think of the six Tertiary Colors as the Grandchildren in the family of colors, since their genetic makeup combines a Primary and Secondary color. Yellow + Orange = YELLOW-ORANGE Red + Orange = RED-ORANGE Red + Violet = RED-VIOLET Blue + Violet = BLUE-VIOLET Blue + Green = BLUE-GREEN Yellow + Green = YELLOW-GREEN This totals twelve basic colors that allows you to mix an endless variety of hues, tints, tones and shades.

8 Monochromatic Colors A monochromatic color scheme uses different values of the same color. A monochromatic color scheme uses three different values of the same color.

9 Complementary Colors A complementary color scheme uses two opposite colors on the color wheel. A complementary color scheme uses two opposite colors on the color wheel.

10 Analogous Colors An analogous color scheme uses three adjacent colors on the color wheel. An analogous color scheme uses three adjacent colors on the color wheel.

11 Cool Colors Cool colors include green, blue, and purple, are often more subdued than warm colors.  Cool colors include green, blue, and purple, are often more subdued than warm colors. Blue is the only primary color within the cool spectrum, which means the other colors are created by combining blue with a warm color (yellow for green and red for purple). Greens take on some of the attributes of yellow, and purple takes on some of the attributes of red.

12 Warm Colors Warm colors include red, orange, and yellow, and variations of those three colors. Warm colors include red, orange, and yellow, and variations of those three colors. Red and yellow are both primary colors, with orange falling in the middle, which means warm colors are all truly warm and aren’t created by combining a warm color with a cool color. 

13 Resources http://color-wheel-artist.com/primary-colors.html
designers-part-1-the-meaning-of-color/ Resources


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