martes, 21 de julio de 2015

Ref 871.- Watercolor Analogous Color
An analogous colour scheme is made up of 3, 4 or 5 colours which are located side-by-side on the colour wheel. Analogous colours tend to look very harmonious and pleasing together because they are closely related. It is a relaxing colour scheme, even with a brilliant palette. The eye feels easy travelling from one “similar” colour to another.

If you choose the most common 4-hue analogous colour scheme, no matter which four hues you display on your colour wheel, there will be one primary and three others that all share that primary colour. They are related! Therefore, they "get along together"
Analogous colour schemes can be broken down into warm and cool colour schemes. The warm analogous colour scheme would consist of red, red-orange, orange, yellow-orange, yellow, yellow-green and various values and intensities of those colours. A cool analogous colour scheme would consist of green, blue-green, blue, blue-violet, violet and various values and intensities of those colours.

Usually, when using an analogous colour scheme, one colour or hue is used as the dominant colour while the others are used to enrich the scheme.
 
                          "Adventure happens; when there is no good planning"

No hay comentarios.:

Publicar un comentario