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Published byKory Dean Modified over 9 years ago
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Colour Theory Colour Theory
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Colour occurs because of light. (If there is no light there is no colour!) Colour is dependent upon the quality of light present. (low light = duller colours, bright light = brighter colours)
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A colour also changes in relation to other colours around that colour.
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The Colour Wheel The Colour Wheel (Use ROY G BIV to remember the order.) Yellow Yellow-Green Green Blue-Green Blue Blue-Violet Violet Red-Violet Red Red-Orange Orange Yellow-Orange
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– make all other colours : red, blue, yellow – made by combining two primaries: orange, green, violet – made from a primary and a secondary: R-O, Y-O, Y-G, B-G, B-V, R-V Primary colours – make all other colours : red, blue, yellow Secondary colours – made by combining two primaries: orange, green, violet Tertiary colours – made from a primary and a secondary: R-O, Y-O, Y-G, B-G, B-V, R-V
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Warm colours – red, orange, yellow Cool colours – violet, blue, green
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Warm Colours Cool Colours
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The Properties of Colour Hue (name, ex. blue) Intensity – refers to brightness/dullness of a colour (bright blue/ dull blue) Value – refers to how light or dark a colour is. (light blue/dark blue)
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Colour Intensity: To dull a colour, add its complement (opposite) Mixing two complementary colours will make a neutral colour (brown, grey)
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Colour Value Tints - add white to lighten a colour Shades – add black to darken a colour
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Colour Schemes
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1. Monochromatic – tints and shades of one colour 1. Monochromatic – tints and shades of one colour
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2.Analogous – colours beside each other on the colour wheel
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3.Complementary– colours opposite each other on the colour wheel.
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4.Split Complimentary – one colour plus the two colors on either side of its complement
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5.Triadic – three colours equidistant from one another on the colour wheel
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