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Submitted To:- Submitted By:-

Ms. Saniya Bhojwani Prachi Batham


Class:- FBM
 The color wheel is a
means of organizing
the colors in the
spectrum.
 The color wheel
consists of 12
sections, each
containing one hue.
› The primary colors are,
red, yellow and blue
and are the purest and
most intense of all the
colors.
• The secondary colors
are orange, green and
violet and are duller
than the primaries
because they have
been mixed together.
• Primary + Primary =
Secondary

Red + yellow = orange


Blue + yellow= green

Red + blue = violet


• These 6 colors are
formed by mixing a
primary and a
secondary color.
• Primary + Secondary =
Tertiary
yellow + orange=yellow-orange
red + orange = red-orange
Red + violet = red-violet

Blue + violet = blue-violet

Blue + green = blue-green

Yellow + green = yellow-green


 Additive color is a method
to create color by mixing a
number of different
light colors, with shades of
red, green, and blue being
the most common primary
colors used in the additive
color system. Also know as
RGV.
 Green + red = yellow
 Red + blue = magenta
 Blue + green = cyan
 In contrast to combining
the additive primary
colors of red, green, and
blue to make
white, subtractive primary
colors is a four-
color printing process that
uses cyan, magenta,
yellow and black. This is
often referred to as CMYK.
 Cyan + magenta + yellow
= Black
 Magenta + yellow = red
 Magenta + cyan = blue
 Cyan + yellow = green
 Warm colors are vivid & energetic
& are tends to advance in space.

 Yellow
 Yellow-orange
 Orange
 red-orange
 Red
 Red-violet
Cool colors gives impression of
calm & create a soothing effect.
 yellow-green
 green
 blue-green
 blue
 blue-violet
 violet
 Neutral colors don't usually show up on
the color wheel. Neutral colors include
black, white, gray, and sometimes brown
and beige. They are sometimes called
“earth tones.”
 Tints :- when we add
white to a pure hue.
 Shades :- when we add
black to a hue.
 Tones :- when we add
grey to a pure hue.
 Complimentary Color Scheme
 Analogous Color Scheme
 Triadic Color Scheme
 Split complimentary Color
Scheme
 Rectangle Color Scheme
 Square Color Scheme
 Achromatic Color Scheme
 Monochromatic Color
Scheme
 Complementary colors are
colors that are opposite
each other on the color
wheel.
 Here in image green and red
are complementary
 A complement absorbs all
the light waves the other
color reflects and is the
strongest contrast to the
color.
 Analogous color
schemes use colors that
are next to each other
on the color wheel. They
usually match well and
create serene and
comfortable designs.
 Example- yellow-green,
yellow, yellow-orange.
 A triadic color
scheme uses colors that
are evenly spaced
around
the color wheel. Triadic
color harmonies tend to
be quite vibrant, even if
you use pale or
unsaturated versions of
your hues.
The split-complementary
color scheme is a variation
of the complementary
color scheme. In addition
to the base color, it uses
the two colors adjacent to
its complement. This color
scheme has the same
strong visual contrast as
the complementary color
scheme, but has less
tension.
 The rectangle color
scheme four colors
arranged in two
complementary
pairs
The square color
scheme has four
colors spaced evenly
around the color
circle.
 An achromatic color
scheme is simply
colorless scheme
possessing no hue,
using only black,
white and gray.
 Monochromatic colors
are one color(hue)
with the tints and
shades of that color.

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