This is a presentation about what does it mean to use colors when creating user interfaces. It covers Colors Theory, Colors Psychology, Color combinations, and mobile platforms colors. At the end, there is an exercise.
This poem by William Blake uses imagery of sweet dreams, sleep, smiles and moans to wish a happy, peaceful sleep for a child. The speaker sees the child as bearing the holy image of God, who as an infant small once wept for all humanity. Infant smiles are likened to God's own smiles that beguile heaven and earth into peace.
This document provides a summary of color theory and color psychology concepts. It discusses the definition of color, color spectrum, color sources and history. It describes color systems like subtractive and additive color. It explains color properties including primary, secondary and tertiary colors using a color wheel. It discusses color harmony concepts such as analogous, complementary, split complementary, triad and tetrad colors. It also covers achromatic colors like tints, tones and shades. Finally, it provides an overview of color psychology including the psychological effects and meanings of different colors in various cultures.
This document provides an overview of color theory and properties. It discusses the history of color study, color wheels, primary/secondary/tertiary colors, color harmonies, achromatic colors, color temperature, and the psychology of color. The document is intended as part of a course on color study and includes sections on color introduction, properties, harmony, achromatic colors, temperature, psychology, and references.
The document discusses color as an artistic element and describes how different colors can create different feelings and emotions. It defines color and explains color theory concepts like hue, value, saturation, primary colors, secondary colors, tertiary colors, and color harmonies including monochromatic, complementary, split complementary, triadic, and analogous color schemes. Color is one of the most powerful artistic elements and understanding uses of color is crucial in effective composition and design.
The document discusses color concepts and their use in merchandise development. It describes the physical and psychological reactions people have to different colors, and how colors can influence moods and shopping behaviors. It then provides details on the color wheel, including primary, secondary, tertiary, warm, cool, complementary, analogous, and other color schemes. The last parts discuss how color harmony is created and factors like context, dimensions, and cycles that are considered in developing an effective color story for merchandise.
This document provides information about color studies, including definitions of color, color properties, color psychology, and cultural meanings of color. It discusses primary colors, secondary colors, color wheels, color harmonies, warm and cool colors, and the psychological effects of different colors. The document includes a rationale for a final painting showing a boy sitting in a garden chair in the raining night, using colors like blue, black, white, and red to convey feelings of hesitation and being lost. References are provided at the end.
Color plays an important role in first impressions, with up to 90% of assessments based on color alone within 90 seconds of initial viewing. However, color is subjective and people respond differently depending on personal preference, cultural background, and color associations. In general, different colors convey different meanings - for example, red often represents passion but can also signify danger or communism depending on context. Understanding color terminology such as hue, saturation, shade, and tint is important for effectively communicating through color. Traditional color schemes include monochromatic, analogous, complementary, and triadic combinations.
This poem by William Blake uses imagery of sweet dreams, sleep, smiles and moans to wish a happy, peaceful sleep for a child. The speaker sees the child as bearing the holy image of God, who as an infant small once wept for all humanity. Infant smiles are likened to God's own smiles that beguile heaven and earth into peace.
This document provides a summary of color theory and color psychology concepts. It discusses the definition of color, color spectrum, color sources and history. It describes color systems like subtractive and additive color. It explains color properties including primary, secondary and tertiary colors using a color wheel. It discusses color harmony concepts such as analogous, complementary, split complementary, triad and tetrad colors. It also covers achromatic colors like tints, tones and shades. Finally, it provides an overview of color psychology including the psychological effects and meanings of different colors in various cultures.
This document provides an overview of color theory and properties. It discusses the history of color study, color wheels, primary/secondary/tertiary colors, color harmonies, achromatic colors, color temperature, and the psychology of color. The document is intended as part of a course on color study and includes sections on color introduction, properties, harmony, achromatic colors, temperature, psychology, and references.
The document discusses color as an artistic element and describes how different colors can create different feelings and emotions. It defines color and explains color theory concepts like hue, value, saturation, primary colors, secondary colors, tertiary colors, and color harmonies including monochromatic, complementary, split complementary, triadic, and analogous color schemes. Color is one of the most powerful artistic elements and understanding uses of color is crucial in effective composition and design.
The document discusses color concepts and their use in merchandise development. It describes the physical and psychological reactions people have to different colors, and how colors can influence moods and shopping behaviors. It then provides details on the color wheel, including primary, secondary, tertiary, warm, cool, complementary, analogous, and other color schemes. The last parts discuss how color harmony is created and factors like context, dimensions, and cycles that are considered in developing an effective color story for merchandise.
This document provides information about color studies, including definitions of color, color properties, color psychology, and cultural meanings of color. It discusses primary colors, secondary colors, color wheels, color harmonies, warm and cool colors, and the psychological effects of different colors. The document includes a rationale for a final painting showing a boy sitting in a garden chair in the raining night, using colors like blue, black, white, and red to convey feelings of hesitation and being lost. References are provided at the end.
Color plays an important role in first impressions, with up to 90% of assessments based on color alone within 90 seconds of initial viewing. However, color is subjective and people respond differently depending on personal preference, cultural background, and color associations. In general, different colors convey different meanings - for example, red often represents passion but can also signify danger or communism depending on context. Understanding color terminology such as hue, saturation, shade, and tint is important for effectively communicating through color. Traditional color schemes include monochromatic, analogous, complementary, and triadic combinations.
Teaching Arts in Elementary Grades Element of Visual Arts ColorJorielynApostol
This document discusses color theory and the elements of visual art related to color. It explains the color wheel and the primary, secondary, tertiary and neutral colors. It also defines hue, value, saturation and describes warm and cool colors. Finally, it discusses color harmony, color schemes, and the psychology and symbolism of different colors.
The document discusses various color schemes and how they relate to the color wheel. It provides information on the primary colors that make up the color wheel (red, blue, green), secondary colors, complementary colors and how analogous, monochromatic, warm/cool color schemes work. It also discusses color scales used for color grading and control in product design.
The presentation deals with the colour theory to be taught to the first-year students of different design backgrounds. This primarily deals with colour theory of RYB Scheme
A Brief History of Colour_Part 1 by Dharam MentorDharam Mentor
What drives Dharam in his professional life is practically proving how 'Good Design thinking' translates into 'Good Business' to entrepreneurs, business owners, and startups. He has acquired his master's in Branding degree from the University of the Arts London and is also an alumnus of the prestigious London College of Communication.
This document discusses color studies for a diploma in new media design. It covers various topics related to color including:
1. Color systems like RGB, CMYK, and subtractive/additive systems.
2. Color properties such as hue, value, saturation, temperature, primary/secondary/tertiary colors, and color harmonies.
3. Color psychology and the symbolic meanings and cultural associations of different colors.
4. How color is used and reflected in the author's own artwork and culture.
This document discusses color studies, including:
1. Definitions of color and color systems like RGB, CMYK, additive and subtractive.
2. Color properties such as hue, value, saturation, temperature, primary/secondary/tertiary colors, and color wheel.
3. Color harmonies like analogous, complementary, split complementary, triad, and tetrad.
4. Color psychology and the meanings/symbolism associated with different colors.
Discussion on the subject Colour_by Dharam Mentor.pdfDharam Mentor
The good 'Design-thinking' approach encompasses several tools that enable us to arrive at adequate solutions. The problem can be of any nature, from structural design to cultural appropriation, style segmentation to meaningful communication, corporate branding to products/services branding, or Emotional innovation to Process Innovation.
What drives Dharam in his professional life is practically proving how 'Good Design thinking' translates into 'Good Business' to entrepreneurs, business owners, and startups. He has acquired his master's in Branding degree from the University of the Arts London and is also an alumnus of the prestigious London College of Communication.
This document discusses colors used in interior design. It defines key color concepts like hue, value, and saturation. Primary colors are red, yellow, and blue which can be mixed to create secondary colors like orange, green, and violet. Tertiary colors are made from mixing two secondary colors. Color schemes are influenced by user preference, style, purpose, and cultural associations with different hues. The document associates common colors with feelings to show how designers use color psychology.
The document discusses colour theory and colour psychology. It explains the colour wheel and primary, secondary, tertiary, analogous, complementary, split-complementary, triad, and tetrad colour schemes. It also discusses warm and cold colours, tints, shades, tones, colour value, colour harmony, and the psychological effects of different colours like red, orange, yellow, green and blue. Colour is an important design element that can be used to set moods and convey meanings through its psychological associations.
1) The document discusses various principles of visual design including visual elements, patterns, and arrangements. It addresses selecting appropriate elements, choosing underlying patterns, and arranging individual elements within the chosen pattern.
2) Key visual design elements discussed are realistic, analogic, and organizational visuals. Design patterns must consider principles like balance, proximity, and alignment. Effective arrangements focus attention on important messages and engage viewers.
3) Cultural and audience factors like color preferences must also be considered. Visuals should be tailored based on whether the audience is children or adults.
The document discusses color theory and the effects of different colors. It explains that colors can affect us physically and mentally, with red increasing blood pressure and blue having a calming effect. It then covers the individual colors, describing traits and symbolism of colors like red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, pink, white, grey, and black. It also explains color theory concepts such as the color wheel, additive and subtractive color mixing, color harmony, hue, value, tints tones and shades, and color schemes like monochromatic, complementary, split-complementary, analogous, and triadic.
Color theory is a set of principles for creating harmonious color combinations using a color wheel. The color wheel represents the color spectrum as a circle, with harmonious combinations including complementary colors opposite each other, or colors in triangles or rectangles. Common color schemes are monochromatic (variations of a single hue), analogous (adjacent hues), complementary (opposite hues), split complementary, triadic (three equally spaced hues), and tetradic (two complementary pairs). Color theory analyzes hue relationships, not tones or saturation. The first color wheel was created by Newton, and current theory developed from the work of Goethe and Itten.
Basic Color Theory that introduces high school students to Munsell Color System. Includes my student's work and images from internet for Educational use only.
This document provides an overview of color studies, including the basics of color theory, properties, harmony, psychology and applications. It discusses the visible light spectrum, color wheel, primary/secondary/tertiary colors, warm and cool colors, analogus/complementary/split complementary schemes, the psychological and therapeutic effects of different hues, and how color is used to attract attention and convey meaning. References are provided for additional reading.
The document discusses color vision and how different species perceive different colors. It then covers the concepts of additive and subtractive color, describing how RGB light and paints/pigments combine colors. The rest of the document covers color wheels/models, tints/shades/tones, warm/cool colors, color harmony formulas, effects of context/background on color perception, cultural meanings of color, and suggests related art activities.
presentacion1coloringles-2023 power point.pptxeverezcotelo
The document discusses various aspects of color vision and color theory. It defines color vision as the ability to detect colors which depends on the type of color-detecting cells called cones inside the eye. It then explains the differences between additive color (light) and subtractive color (pigments) as well as primary, secondary, tertiary colors. The document also discusses color wheels, tints/shades/tones, color harmony, effects of color context and backgrounds, color systems like RAL, PANTONE, and meanings associated with different colors.
The document discusses the key elements of art including line, shape, form, space, texture, value, and color. It provides details on each element, with a focus on line and color. Regarding line, it describes the three types of lines - vertical, horizontal, and diagonal - and the feelings they can convey. For color, it discusses hue, value, intensity, primary/secondary colors, color wheel relationships, and the emotional responses colors can elicit. The document is intended to help readers analyze, appreciate and discuss art by understanding these fundamental elements.
The document discusses color vision and color detection in human and animal eyes. It explains that the ability to see color is determined by the type of color-detecting cones inside the eye. It also discusses additive and subtractive color models, color wheels, tints, shades and tones, color harmony formulas like analogous and complementary colors, the use of warm and cool colors, and how color appears differently based on surrounding colors and backgrounds. The document also mentions Pantone colors and explores concepts like color harmony and cultural meanings of color.
Color theory provides guidance for mixing colors to create visually pleasing designs, maximum readability, and convey intended meanings. It utilizes a color wheel to represent primary, secondary, and tertiary colors. Primary colors are red, yellow, and blue which can be mixed to create secondary colors of orange, green, and purple. Tertiary colors result from mixing a primary and secondary color. Color theory also addresses warm and cool colors for conveying different feelings, as well as concepts of color harmony, analogous colors that are adjacent on the wheel, and complementary colors that are directly opposite.
This is s presentation about usability testing of medical devices following IEC 62366. It describes the steps that should be followed in order to comply with the process based standard. You will find a detailed documents description, testing sessions descriptions, using instruments and document templates that will get you started.
Teaching Arts in Elementary Grades Element of Visual Arts ColorJorielynApostol
This document discusses color theory and the elements of visual art related to color. It explains the color wheel and the primary, secondary, tertiary and neutral colors. It also defines hue, value, saturation and describes warm and cool colors. Finally, it discusses color harmony, color schemes, and the psychology and symbolism of different colors.
The document discusses various color schemes and how they relate to the color wheel. It provides information on the primary colors that make up the color wheel (red, blue, green), secondary colors, complementary colors and how analogous, monochromatic, warm/cool color schemes work. It also discusses color scales used for color grading and control in product design.
The presentation deals with the colour theory to be taught to the first-year students of different design backgrounds. This primarily deals with colour theory of RYB Scheme
A Brief History of Colour_Part 1 by Dharam MentorDharam Mentor
What drives Dharam in his professional life is practically proving how 'Good Design thinking' translates into 'Good Business' to entrepreneurs, business owners, and startups. He has acquired his master's in Branding degree from the University of the Arts London and is also an alumnus of the prestigious London College of Communication.
This document discusses color studies for a diploma in new media design. It covers various topics related to color including:
1. Color systems like RGB, CMYK, and subtractive/additive systems.
2. Color properties such as hue, value, saturation, temperature, primary/secondary/tertiary colors, and color harmonies.
3. Color psychology and the symbolic meanings and cultural associations of different colors.
4. How color is used and reflected in the author's own artwork and culture.
This document discusses color studies, including:
1. Definitions of color and color systems like RGB, CMYK, additive and subtractive.
2. Color properties such as hue, value, saturation, temperature, primary/secondary/tertiary colors, and color wheel.
3. Color harmonies like analogous, complementary, split complementary, triad, and tetrad.
4. Color psychology and the meanings/symbolism associated with different colors.
Discussion on the subject Colour_by Dharam Mentor.pdfDharam Mentor
The good 'Design-thinking' approach encompasses several tools that enable us to arrive at adequate solutions. The problem can be of any nature, from structural design to cultural appropriation, style segmentation to meaningful communication, corporate branding to products/services branding, or Emotional innovation to Process Innovation.
What drives Dharam in his professional life is practically proving how 'Good Design thinking' translates into 'Good Business' to entrepreneurs, business owners, and startups. He has acquired his master's in Branding degree from the University of the Arts London and is also an alumnus of the prestigious London College of Communication.
This document discusses colors used in interior design. It defines key color concepts like hue, value, and saturation. Primary colors are red, yellow, and blue which can be mixed to create secondary colors like orange, green, and violet. Tertiary colors are made from mixing two secondary colors. Color schemes are influenced by user preference, style, purpose, and cultural associations with different hues. The document associates common colors with feelings to show how designers use color psychology.
The document discusses colour theory and colour psychology. It explains the colour wheel and primary, secondary, tertiary, analogous, complementary, split-complementary, triad, and tetrad colour schemes. It also discusses warm and cold colours, tints, shades, tones, colour value, colour harmony, and the psychological effects of different colours like red, orange, yellow, green and blue. Colour is an important design element that can be used to set moods and convey meanings through its psychological associations.
1) The document discusses various principles of visual design including visual elements, patterns, and arrangements. It addresses selecting appropriate elements, choosing underlying patterns, and arranging individual elements within the chosen pattern.
2) Key visual design elements discussed are realistic, analogic, and organizational visuals. Design patterns must consider principles like balance, proximity, and alignment. Effective arrangements focus attention on important messages and engage viewers.
3) Cultural and audience factors like color preferences must also be considered. Visuals should be tailored based on whether the audience is children or adults.
The document discusses color theory and the effects of different colors. It explains that colors can affect us physically and mentally, with red increasing blood pressure and blue having a calming effect. It then covers the individual colors, describing traits and symbolism of colors like red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, pink, white, grey, and black. It also explains color theory concepts such as the color wheel, additive and subtractive color mixing, color harmony, hue, value, tints tones and shades, and color schemes like monochromatic, complementary, split-complementary, analogous, and triadic.
Color theory is a set of principles for creating harmonious color combinations using a color wheel. The color wheel represents the color spectrum as a circle, with harmonious combinations including complementary colors opposite each other, or colors in triangles or rectangles. Common color schemes are monochromatic (variations of a single hue), analogous (adjacent hues), complementary (opposite hues), split complementary, triadic (three equally spaced hues), and tetradic (two complementary pairs). Color theory analyzes hue relationships, not tones or saturation. The first color wheel was created by Newton, and current theory developed from the work of Goethe and Itten.
Basic Color Theory that introduces high school students to Munsell Color System. Includes my student's work and images from internet for Educational use only.
This document provides an overview of color studies, including the basics of color theory, properties, harmony, psychology and applications. It discusses the visible light spectrum, color wheel, primary/secondary/tertiary colors, warm and cool colors, analogus/complementary/split complementary schemes, the psychological and therapeutic effects of different hues, and how color is used to attract attention and convey meaning. References are provided for additional reading.
The document discusses color vision and how different species perceive different colors. It then covers the concepts of additive and subtractive color, describing how RGB light and paints/pigments combine colors. The rest of the document covers color wheels/models, tints/shades/tones, warm/cool colors, color harmony formulas, effects of context/background on color perception, cultural meanings of color, and suggests related art activities.
presentacion1coloringles-2023 power point.pptxeverezcotelo
The document discusses various aspects of color vision and color theory. It defines color vision as the ability to detect colors which depends on the type of color-detecting cells called cones inside the eye. It then explains the differences between additive color (light) and subtractive color (pigments) as well as primary, secondary, tertiary colors. The document also discusses color wheels, tints/shades/tones, color harmony, effects of color context and backgrounds, color systems like RAL, PANTONE, and meanings associated with different colors.
The document discusses the key elements of art including line, shape, form, space, texture, value, and color. It provides details on each element, with a focus on line and color. Regarding line, it describes the three types of lines - vertical, horizontal, and diagonal - and the feelings they can convey. For color, it discusses hue, value, intensity, primary/secondary colors, color wheel relationships, and the emotional responses colors can elicit. The document is intended to help readers analyze, appreciate and discuss art by understanding these fundamental elements.
The document discusses color vision and color detection in human and animal eyes. It explains that the ability to see color is determined by the type of color-detecting cones inside the eye. It also discusses additive and subtractive color models, color wheels, tints, shades and tones, color harmony formulas like analogous and complementary colors, the use of warm and cool colors, and how color appears differently based on surrounding colors and backgrounds. The document also mentions Pantone colors and explores concepts like color harmony and cultural meanings of color.
Color theory provides guidance for mixing colors to create visually pleasing designs, maximum readability, and convey intended meanings. It utilizes a color wheel to represent primary, secondary, and tertiary colors. Primary colors are red, yellow, and blue which can be mixed to create secondary colors of orange, green, and purple. Tertiary colors result from mixing a primary and secondary color. Color theory also addresses warm and cool colors for conveying different feelings, as well as concepts of color harmony, analogous colors that are adjacent on the wheel, and complementary colors that are directly opposite.
This is s presentation about usability testing of medical devices following IEC 62366. It describes the steps that should be followed in order to comply with the process based standard. You will find a detailed documents description, testing sessions descriptions, using instruments and document templates that will get you started.
Primul Curs in cadrul Edge Academy
• UX/UI concept
• Diferentele intre UX si UI
• Cercetare si colectarea informatiei
• Intelegerea si analizarea contentului
• Wireframes
Discovering the Best Indian Architects A Spotlight on Design Forum Internatio...Designforuminternational
India’s architectural landscape is a vibrant tapestry that weaves together the country's rich cultural heritage and its modern aspirations. From majestic historical structures to cutting-edge contemporary designs, the work of Indian architects is celebrated worldwide. Among the many firms shaping this dynamic field, Design Forum International stands out as a leader in innovative and sustainable architecture. This blog explores some of the best Indian architects, highlighting their contributions and showcasing the most famous architects in India.
Architectural and constructions management experience since 2003 including 18 years located in UAE.
Coordinate and oversee all technical activities relating to architectural and construction projects,
including directing the design team, reviewing drafts and computer models, and approving design
changes.
Organize and typically develop, and review building plans, ensuring that a project meets all safety and
environmental standards.
Prepare feasibility studies, construction contracts, and tender documents with specifications and
tender analyses.
Consulting with clients, work on formulating equipment and labor cost estimates, ensuring a project
meets environmental, safety, structural, zoning, and aesthetic standards.
Monitoring the progress of a project to assess whether or not it is in compliance with building plans
and project deadlines.
Attention to detail, exceptional time management, and strong problem-solving and communication
skills are required for this role.
Practical eLearning Makeovers for EveryoneBianca Woods
Welcome to Practical eLearning Makeovers for Everyone. In this presentation, we’ll take a look at a bunch of easy-to-use visual design tips and tricks. And we’ll do this by using them to spruce up some eLearning screens that are in dire need of a new look.
3. UI COURSE
By the end of this course
you should be able to:
Understand and create a balanced
and functional color palette
Create and identify
proper icons
Define a set of compatible
and usable fonts
Create and use
various UI shapes
58. COLOR TAKE AWAY
Useful links
Material Design Guidelines
HIG Apple Guidelines
Color theory
Colour lovers
Coolors generator
Color Tool Material Design