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Published byAlexina York Modified over 9 years ago
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“GREAT ART PICKS UP WHERE NATURE ENDS” – MARC CHAGALL
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ISAAC NEWTON DISCOVERED THE THEORY OF COLOR IN 1666 WHILE WORKING WITH A PRISM
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PRIMARY COLORS: RED, YELLOW, BLUE
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SECONDARY COLORS: GREEN, ORANGE, VIOLET
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INTERMEDIATE COLORS ARE COLORS THAT HAVE “TWO NAMES” – COMBINE ONE PRIMARY AND ONE SECONDARY COLOR
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COMPLEMENTARY COLORS: TWO COLORS THAT ARE DIRECTLY ACROSS FROM EACH OTHER
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ANALOGOUS COLORS: A GROUP OF COLORS THAT LIVE NEXT TO EACH OTHER
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WARMCOLORSWARMCOLORS
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COOLCOLORSCOOLCOLORS
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TINT: A LIGHTER VERSION OF A COLOR (ADD WHITE) SHADE: A DARKER VERSION OF A COLOR (ADD BLACK OR A COOL COLOR)
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VALUE SCALE: A VALUE SCALE IS A RANGE OF VALUES OF ONE COLOR. A TYPICAL VALUE SCALE HAS 7-9 VALUES, BUT YOU COULD GET MORE IF YOU REALLY TRIED!
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MONOCHROMATIC: A GROUP OF VALUES (TINTS AND SHADES) OF ONE COLOR
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NEUTRALS/EARTH TONES
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JUST A REMINDER…
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WHERE DO WE SEE COLOR??? EVERYWHERE!!! LET’S TEST OUR KNOWLEDGE…
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Red and Green are across from each other on the Color Wheel. That makes them complementary colors! COMPLEMENTARY COLOR SCHEME
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Tints and Shades of Blue create a Monochromatic Color Scheme using blue, white and black MONOCHROMATIC!!!
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You CAN make ALLLL colors with just Red, Yellow, Blue, White and Black! PRIMARY COLOR SCHEME
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A VALUE SCALE is a range from lightest to darkest, in this photograph white and black. VALUE SCALE
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This collection of seeds and spices could be considered a…??? YOU DECIDE!
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