Color
Of all the design elements, color is the most fascinating.
It attracts attention. It excites emotions. It enriches our lives.
Color is a tool you can use when you are designing.
An easy way to see how colors work together is to use a color wheel.
4H 633 Reviewed July 2009
violet
violet
blue-violet
blue-violet
blue
blue
blue-green
blue-green
green
green
yellow-green
yellow-green
yellow
yellow
yellow-orange
yellow-orange
orange
orange
red-orange
red-orange
red
red
red-violet
red-violet
Primary and Secondary Hues
All the many individual colors humans see are derived
from the three
primary hues, yellow, red, and blue.
Yellow
Analogous
Analogous schemes are three to
five hues that are next to each
other on the color wheel. These
schemes always have one color in
common. Red is the common hue
in the example shown here
(orange, red-orange, and red).
To learn more
To learn more about color, experiment and observe.
(1) Mix your own paints to create a color wheel.
(2) Trace the outline of shapes in a magazine picture.
Color in the shapes, using one of the color schemes.
(3) Find 10 colors that really catch your eye. Describe
them by hue, value, and intensity.
(4) Draw a simple design three times. Color each one
using a different color scheme.
Color Schemes
Monochromatic
Monochromatic color
combinations are made
up of one hue in different
values and intensities. This
example uses different
values and intensities of red.
Complementary
These schemes are made from hues
directly opposite each other on the
color wheel, such as yellow and
violet. These combinations have the
strongest hue contrast.
Secondary hues are a combination of the primary hues.
Yellow + red = orange; red + blue = violet; and
blue + yellow = green.
Hue, Value, and Intensity
Colors differ in hue, value, and intensity.
Hue is the name of a color, such as yellow, red, or blue.
Value describes how light or dark a color is. When a
color has white added to it, it is a tint and is lighter in
value. When a color has black added to it, it is a shade
and is darker in value.
Intensity (also called chroma or saturation) is the
brightness or dullness of a color. A color as we see it
on a color wheel is at full intensity (bright). When we
mix it with gray, black, or white, it becomes dull. Colors
also lose intensity when mixed with their complement
(the opposite color on the wheel). For example, adding
a little green to bright red will make the red duller.
Each color has all three qualities, hue, value, inten-
sity. For example, the 4-H emblem is green (hue),
medium (value), and bright (intensity).
Colors can be warm or cool. The warm hues are the
ones seen in the sun or fire: yellow, orange, red. Cool
hues—greens and blues—are found in the restful ele-
ments of nature, such as the sky, water, and grass.
Your eyes will see three things in each color:
• What color (its hue or name),
• Its lightness or darkness (its value), and
• Its brightness or dullness (its intensity).
Red
Blue
Green Orange
Violet
Reviewed by Susan Bogue, Iowa State University Extension 4-H Youth
Development program specialist. Originally prepared by JaneAnn
Stout, former ISU Extension art and design specialist. Edited by Carol
Ouverson, communication specialist.
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