colour theory. what’s the point? colour wheel by sir isaac newton

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Colour Theory

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Page 1: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Colour Theory

Page 2: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

What’s the point?

Page 3: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton
Page 4: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton
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Colour WheelBy Sir Isaac Newton

Page 7: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Hue: the name of a colour

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Brightness: the absolute value of a colour

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Achromatic Colour Wheel

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Saturation: the amount of hue in a given object, independent of value

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Additive Colour refers to the requirement to add primary colours to create white (physical light).

To create all the spectral hues, we must mix the additive primary colours of red, green and blue.

Digital media uses additive colour (ie. computers and tv).

Page 12: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Primary hues: Red, Green and Blue

Page 13: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Secondary hues: Yellow, Cyan and Magenta

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Primary + Secondary + Tertiary hues = Additive Colour Wheel

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Subtractive Colour refers to the requirement to subtract primary colours to create white (reflective light).

To create all the spectral hues, we must mix different colour pigments and dyes together.

Analog media uses subtractive colour (ie. paintings, newspapers).

Page 16: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Primary hues: Red, Yellow and Blue

Page 17: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Secondary hues: Orange, Violet and Green

Page 18: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Primary + Secondary + Tertiary hues = Subtractive Colour Wheel

Page 19: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Tint and Shade: Tint refers to the amount of white we add to a hue. Shade refers to the amount of black we add to a hue

Page 20: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Colour Harmonies: different sets of colour combinations that work well together.

Complementary

Triadic

Analogous

Monochromatic

Page 21: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Monochromatic Harmonies refer to variations on one hue. Variation is created using saturation and brightness.

Page 22: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Analogous Harmonies are based on the combination of several hues located adjacent to each other on the colour wheel.

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Yellow Analogous: Yellow is analogous with yellow orange and yellow green.

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Blue Analogous: Blue is analogous with blue green and indigo.

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Red Analogous: Red is analogous with violet and red orange.

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Cool vs Warm: The colour wheel can be divided into two analogous groups of hues - warm and cool.

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Complementary Harmonies are created using colours that are directly opposite each other on the colour wheel.

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Split Complementaries consist of three hues: the principle hue,and the two hues directly adjacent to the complementary hue.

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Triad Harmonies are created from three hues spaced an equidistance around the colour wheel.

Page 30: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton
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OUCH MY EYES

Page 34: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Some good sites dealing with colour:

Claudia Cortes’ Color in Motion

Poynter’s Institute’s Color Contrast and Dimension in News Design

Adobe’s Kuler Applicationhttp://kuler.adobe.com/

Colour Lovershttp://www.colourlovers.com/

Page 35: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

“Building Blocks” essential to good graphic design:

Shape and Form

Spatial Awareness (layout and grid systems)

Typography: understanding what type is and how to work with it

Dynamics, Emphasis and Contrast

Using Colour as a powerful tool rather than just decoration e.g. emotive: to arouse intense feelings in viewer

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CMYK

cyan, magenta, yellow and black

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RGB

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encourage viewer to move through information

Content taken from: Lipton’s The Practical Guide to Information Design

How to apply colour meaningfully:

show differences

show similarities

emphasize something

play something down

convey meanings - inherent, assigned, or both

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Page 42: Colour Theory. What’s the point? Colour Wheel By Sir Isaac Newton

Using Colour in Packaging Design

There is no question that colour is the most emotional and also the most subjective aspect in package design.Consumers are passionate about colour.

Colour on a package (e.g. background, illustrations, text) plays a part in the communication of your product.

The challenge with packaging design is that the choice of colours need to relate to a wide variety of consumers.

Designers can not choose colours on a personal basis because the colour perceptions of consumers is too diverse.

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• Colour can identify a particular brand (e.g. red Kit Kat chocolate bar, can of Coke)• Bright colours tend to communicate lightness, festivity, relaxation and joy.• Darker, richer colours suggest a more serious frame of mind.• Colour can help identify the colour of the product inside the product (e.g. Sunlight dish soap)• Green, a colour unacceptable for food packaging is now a standard colour for health-oriented products.• Bright, lively colours are often used on cereal packages, because cereals are usually consumed in the morning, a time associated with brightness.• White or light coloured packages suggest attributes such as diet, light, salt-free or low-calorie.• Gray and black on packages usually are reserved for high-tech consumer products (e.g. digital cameras).• Deep, rich colours suggest good taste, and appetite appeal (e.g. gourmet chocolates.)• Pastel shades, as well as black and gold are often utilized on packages associated with fashion and elegance.

Some generalizations that can draw intellectual/emotional feedback from consumers:

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Consumers have become so accustomedto colour cues that identify certainproduct categories that they respond tothese cues almost automatically.

A prime example would be soft drinks,where red cans and labels signify mostcolas, green stands for ginger ales,yellow for tonic water, and blue forseltzer.

Colour Typecasting

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While it is not impossible to break out of this colour ‘typecast’, try designing a green package colour scheme for a new cola.

Colour Typecasting

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Gender

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Gender

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aeXAcwriid0

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