1 / 11

Color Theory And Photography

Color Theory And Photography. Color Wheel. http://www.tigercolor.com/color-lab/color-theory/color-theory-intro.htm. Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Colors. In the RYB (or subtractive) color model, the primary colors are red, yellow and blue

thom
Download Presentation

Color Theory And Photography

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. ColorTheoryAndPhotography

  2. Color Wheel • http://www.tigercolor.com/color-lab/color-theory/color-theory-intro.htm

  3. Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Colors • In the RYB (or subtractive) color model, the primary colors are red, yellow and blue • The three secondary colors (green, orange and purple) are created by mixing two primary colors • Another six tertiary colors are created by mixing primary and secondary colors http://www.tigercolor.com/color-lab/color-theory/color-theory-intro.htm

  4. Electronic and Pigment Based Color (CMYK) When use pigments, you add differing amounts of paint to create color. The more pigment you add, the darker your color usually becomes. 0% pigment is white, at 100% pigment (or you have mixed together pigments that absorb every wavelength of visible light) you have black. (RGB) A LCD screen starts out black; light is added to the screen in differing amounts to create color. The more light from the red, green, and blue phosphors that is added, the brighter and lighter the screen becomes. Therefore, when you have 0% intensity of red, green, and blue the screen is black and when you have 100% intensity of the red, green, and blue phosphors, the screen is white.

  5. Color Properties • Hue: The name of the color. This allows us to distinguish one color from another by name • Value (Saturation): The lightness or darkness of a color. The most important to keep in mind: if the value of a color is wrong, then the color is wrong • Intensity: The purity or strength of a color (affected by other hues or value) • Tune: The darkness level of grey • http://www.ficml.org/jemimap/style/color/wheel.html

  6. Warm and cool colors • http://www.tigercolor.com/color-lab/color-theory/color-theory-intro.htm

  7. Tints, Shades, and Tones • Tints - adding white to a pure hue • Shades - adding black to a pure hue • Tones - adding gray to a pure hue http://www.tigercolor.com/color-lab/color-theory/color-theory-intro.htm

  8. Browser Safe Color • 216 hues that can be shown on most monitors with responsible consistency and without dithering • http://webdesign.about.com/od/colorcharts/l/bl_colors.htm

  9. Color Scheme • Monochromatic Color Scheme • Analogous Color Scheme • Complementary Color Scheme • http://www.color-wheel-pro.com/color-theory-basics.html

  10. Complementary Colors • Direct / True complementary • Split complementary • Double complementary • Triad • Mutual complementary http://www.color-wheel-pro.com/color-theory-basics.html

  11. Color and Photography • Color affect one another • Color creates moods • Using color to create a focal point • Color harmony • (So detailed for another 4 classes) • Demo http://www.pbase.com/whyhuang/colours

More Related