1 / 45

The Role of Color in Design

The Role of Color in Design. Warm Colors. Warm colors: red, orange, and yellow Red and orange conveys the most warmth Warm colors are suitable for areas of high activity such as kitchens and family rooms. Cool Colors. Cool colors: blues, violet and greens

duncan
Télécharger la présentation

The Role of Color in Design

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Role of Color in Design

  2. Warm Colors • Warm colors: red, orange, and yellow • Red and orange conveys the most warmth • Warm colors are suitable for areas of high activity such as kitchens and family rooms

  3. CoolColors • Cool colors: blues, violet and greens • Popular in bedrooms, bathrooms and home offices because of their relaxing effect.

  4. Illusions with Color • Warm colored objects appear closer than cool colored ones. • You can visually enlarge a room by painting the walls a cool color. • High ceilings painted dark colors appear lower and a light color will allow a ceiling to seem higher. • Bold, bright colors make objects stand out.

  5. Components of Color • Pigments- substances that absorb some light rays and reflect others. • Hue is the color feature that makes one color different from others. • Intensity is the brightness or dullness of a color. • Complement color is the color opposite it on the color wheel. • Value is the lightness or darkness of a color. • Adding white to a hue creates a tint. • Ex. Pink is a tint of red. • Adding black to a he creates a shade. • Lowers the value and darkens it. • Adding gray to a color creates a tone.

  6. A combination of colors selected for a room design in order to create a mood or set a tone. Provides guidelines for designing successfully with color. Color schemes look best when one color dominates Color Scheme

  7. This is what happens with no color scheme.

  8. Types of Color Schemes 1. Neutral 2. Monochromatic 3. Analogous 4. Complementary 5. Split-Complementary 6. Triad

  9. Neutral • Neutral color schemes can be easier to live with than with vibrant color schemes. • Often used as background colors in rooms because they blend well with other colors • Touches of accent colors are usually added for interest

  10. Accented Neutral • One color added to other neutrals to form a scheme. • Effect: draws attention to the one added hue

  11. Monochromatic • Mono means “one”, refers to the tints tones and shades of one color • Possible color combinations are limitless! • Mint green and forest green

  12. Analogous • Often referred to as adjacent. • Two, three, or four hues that lie next to one another on the color wheel. • Possible colors (Can include tints, tones & shades) • Yellow-green, yellow, yellow-orange, orange

  13. Complementary • Two colors that are directly opposite each other on the color wheel. • Possible colors: red & green, blue & orange, yellow & purple

  14. Split Complementary • Three colors - they combine one color with the two colors on each side of its complement

  15. Triad • Three colors equally spaced on the color wheel • Possible colors: tints, tones and shades of primary or secondary colors

  16. Warm Colors • Yellow-green to red • Advancing- make objects look larger or closer than they really are

  17. Cool Colors • Green to red-violet • Receding- objects seems larger and farther away

  18. Forum Assignment • Find a room photo online for each scheme. • Post a link to each photo on the class forum thread “color schemes.” • Include the color scheme, list colors, and give your own observations.

More Related