1. NAMA : MUHAMAD AMIRUL FIRDAUS BIN AZMI
NO. MATRIK : C12A479
KUMPULAN : F2
NAMA PENSYARAH : CIK NORHAMIZAH BINTI ABDUL HAMID
SUBJEK : LUKISAN
TAJUK : COLOR WHEEL
2. WHAT IS COLOR WHEEL
A circle shape that
is divided equally in
to 12 sections, with
each section displaying
a different color
according to its pigment
value. As all colors are
created from the three
primary colors (red, green
and blue), the primary
colors are shown forming a triangle within the color
wheel. The color wheel shows the relationship
between the primary colors, secondary colors, and
complementary colors.
http://www.northlite.net/ps/blend.htm
3. MONOCHROMATIC COLOR SCHEME
A monochromatic color scheme
uses a single color on most every
room surface. In this type of
scheme, various darker shades,
grayer tones, and paler tints of the
main color may be included in the
palette. In addition, the one color
is often paired with white or another
neutral.For example, a monochromatic
room in blue might use single shade
of blue paired with white. Yet it might
also include dark blue upholstery fabric, pale blue walls, medium
blue draperies, and a patterned area rug that includes both blue anjd
white. The window and door trim as well as the ceiling might be
painted in white.
http://interiordec.about.com/cs/colorindecor/f/faqcolormono.htm
4. COLOR SCALES
Grading techniques are widely used to assess product
colour by comparison with a representative series of
fixed colour standards.
For many product types, a characteristic set of
standards was agreed and adopted to aid colour control
and the communication of colour specifications; the
result is a selection of traditional colour grading scales
that have been adopted as industry standards and are
still in common use today.
http://www.lovibondcolour.com/colour-scales
5. WARM AND COOL COLORS
Warm Colors
Warm colors are made with orange,
red, yellow and combinations of them
all. As the name indicates, they tend
to make you think of sunlight and
heat. Warm colors look as though
they come closer, or advance (as
do dark colors), which is why they're
often used to make large rooms look
cozier. If you have a huge bedroom that you want to look more intimate
try painting a warm color such as terra cotta or brown to make it feel
cozier
Cool Colors
Cool colors such as blue, green and light purple have the ability to calm
and soothe. Where warm colors remind us of heat and sunshine, cool
colors remind us of water and sky. Unlike warm colors, cool colors look
as though they recede, making them great for small rooms you want to
look larger. If you have tiny bedroom or powder room that you want to
visually enlarge try painting a color such as light blue to make it look
more spacious.
http://interiordec.about.com/od/color/a/Warm-Colors-And-Cool-Colors.htm
6. ANALOGOUS COLOR SCHEME
If you think of the color wheel
as wedges of a pie, the colors in
one-fourth of the pie are analogous.
Three colors next to each other on
the color wheel comprise an analogous
color scheme. Here are three examples:
=red, orange, and yellow
=green, blue, and purple
=yellow, yellow-green, and green
In an analogous color scheme, usually one color is dominant and the
others secondary in importance.
http://interiordec.about.com/cs/colorindecor/f/faq_anaglous_co.ht
7. COMPLEMENTARY COLORS
Complementary colors
are pairs of colors that
are of “opposite” hue in
some color model. The
exact hue “complementary”
to a given hue depends on
the model in question, and
perceptually uniform, additive,
and subtractive color models,
for example, have differing complements for any given
color.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complementary_colors
8. Paint Color Wheel
An essential tool for paint pros
everywhere, the color wheel is
constructed to help you see the
relationships between different
hues. The bases are three primary
colors: red, blue and yellow. These
are then combined to make the
three secondary colors: orange,
green, and purple. Finally, the
remaining six colors on the wheel are known as tertiary colors
and are mixes of the secondary colors, including such hues as
red-orange and blue-green.
Familiarizing yourself with the color wheel can help you
understand how to best mix and match a cool color with a
warm one, for a naturally balanced room. Here are some
examples of how to use these color pairings effectively.