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THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A-DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour
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THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Dec 30, 2015

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Georgia Potter
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Page 1: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A-DRESS PROGRAM

PowerPoint Presentation 3

Elements of Design:Colour

Page 2: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Colour Definitions• Hue: another term for the name of a colour

• Value: refers to the lightness or darkness of a colour

• Tint: white is added to a colour

• Shade: black is added to a colour

• Intensity: refers to the brightness or dullness of the colour (i.e., the bright yellow of a daffodil is considered a highly intense colour whereas the dull yellow of mustard is considered a colour of low intensity)

Page 3: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

• Neutrals: used to change the value of a hue and create a tint or shade - black, white, beige or gray -in fashion, a neutral can be worn with any other colour

• Warm colours: described as being ‘warm like the sun’- red, orange, yellow - makes objects advance- in fashion they make the body look larger

• Cool colours: described as being cool like the water or sky- blue, green, violet - makes objects recede or back away from the viewer- in fashion makes the body look smaller, used for plus sizes

Page 4: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Colour Effects

What do you want to do?

Use these…Hues

Use these…Values

Use these…Intensities

Increase size or draw attention to an area

Warm hues, such as reds, oranges and yellows

Light, high values, light tints, strong contrasts in value

High intensities, pure, strong, brilliant, saturated with colour

Decrease the size or take attention away from an area

Cool hues, such as blues, blue greens and blue-purples

Low, middle values, dark shades, weak or no contrast in value

Low intensities, weak or grayed colours

Page 5: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Colour WheelShows all of the colours and the colours that are mixed to create them.

Page 6: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Colour Classifications (Primary, Secondary)• Primary colours: colours that are mixed together to create all of the

other colours. - red, yellow, blue

• Secondary colours are a mixture of equal amounts of two primary colours

- red and yellow = orange- red and blue = violet- blue and yellow = green

Page 7: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Colour Classification (Tertiary or Intermediate)• Tertiary (Intermediate) Colours: the combination of a primary colour

plus a neighbouring secondary colour. They are named using the primary colour name first. For example:

yellow-orange yellow –green red – orange red – violet blue – green blue – violet

Page 8: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Colour Harmonies or Colour SchemesWhen certain colours are used together in a pleasing manner, they create a colour harmony, or colour scheme. There are not definite right or wrong ways to harmonize, but there are guidelines:

a. Monochromatic-a single hue/colour is used-variation added by changing values and intensity

Page 9: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Monochromatic colour schemes h

ttp://blog.lmff.com

Page 10: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

b. Complementary Colour Scheme• made by combining complementary colours - those positioned

directly across from each other on the colour wheel (e.g., red and green)

• Using complementary colours makes each colour look brighter and more intense (e.g., blue next to orange makes the blue look more blue, and the orange more orange)

Page 11: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Complementary Colour Scheme

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http://asumodelthroughit.blogspot.ca/2013/09/color.html

Page 12: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

c. Analogous Colour Scheme

• made by combining related hues (those that appear next to each other on the colour wheel)

• usually between 3 and 5 hues are used

• having the same primary colour makes these colour schemes successful and attractive

• because they are related, they blend easily (e.g., yellow, yellow-green and green and the Fall colours in Canada – red, red-orange, and orange)

Page 13: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Analogous Colour Scheme

• https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com https://bagntell.files.wordpress.com/2010/

Page 14: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

d. Triad Colour Scheme

• uses 3 colours that are spaced evenly around the colour wheel (e.g., the 3 primary colours form a triad)

• results in a vibrant and bold colour combination

• to be successful, a variety in value and intensity is important

Page 15: THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR DESIGN-A- DRESS PROGRAM PowerPoint Presentation 3 Elements of Design: Colour.

Triad Colour Scheme

• https://thestylenote.files.wordpress.com https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com