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Triadic Hues: Color relationships based on any three equidistant hues as shown on the color wheel

Hue: The name given to a color to describe its location on the color spectrum based upon its wavelength. Also called Chroma or color.

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Triadic Hues: Color relationships based on any three equidistant hues as shown on the color wheel

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  1. Hue: The name given to a color to describe its location on the color spectrum based upon its wavelength. Also called Chroma or color.

  2. Additive Color: Color as seen in light. Additive color primaries are red, green, and blue-violet. When combined, the result is white light. The more you add color, the brighter the colors become

  3. Subtractive Color: Color seen in pigment as the result of reflected light. Subtractive color primaries are red, yellow and blue, and when they are combined, they produce a dark tone that approaches black. When you combine them, they subtract.

  4. Hue continuum: A graphic representation of the full color spectrum from red to violet. A 360 degree strip.

  5. Color Wheel: A circular depiction of various colors and their relationships traditionally used to illustrate aspects of a particular color theory.

  6. Triadic Hues: Color relationships based on any three equidistant hues as shown on the color wheel

  7. Primary Triad: called so because theoretically they can be mixed to form all other colors. In subtractive color they are red, yellow and blue.

  8. Primary Triad

  9. Secondary Triad: another triadic relationship on the wheel. They are called secondary because In subtractive color, these colors can be made by combining two primaries.

  10. Secondary Triad

  11. Tertiary double triad: hues resulting from the combination of a primary color with a secondary color.

  12. Tertiary Double Triad

  13. Complementary Hues: Hues that lie directly across from each other on the color wheel

  14. Analagous Hues: Hues that lie adjacent to each other on the color wheel

  15. Split complement: particular complementary relationship made by creating a three color analogous set from the oppositional color.

  16. Scintillation: a vibrating or dissonant effect that occurs when complementary or split complementary colors are placed next to one another.

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