Contrast of Hue
- Formed by the juxtaposing of different hues. The greater the distance between hues on a colour wheel, the greater the contrast.
- On a white background, blue would stand out the most, as, seen in tone, it's got the darkest value.
- On a black background, yellow stands out the most, as it has the lightest tonal value. Red almost blends in, as it's the mid tone.
- Use black and white very carefully in Graphic Design, as it cancels out colours.
- High contrast colours, RYB, when placed together all fight for attention.
- The contrast of hue and tone are having an impact on our ability to read words.
Contrast of Tone
- Formed by the juxtaposition of light and dark values. This could be monochromatic.
- The Rods in your eyes differentiate tone.
- Monochromatic is the tone of one colour, not just greyscale.
- In greyscale, the primary colours are the lightest, the darkest and the mid tone, when the colour wheel is desaturated.
- Tonal Spectrum, white round to black.
- White and Black on 50% are equally legible, even though the contrasts are extreme, as they're both the same distance from 50%.
- The same principle can be applied to colour. (Example, Red on Orange)
Contrast of Saturation
- Formed by the juxtaposition of light and dark values and heir relative saturation.
- Grey background with blue on, we would say the blue shape is blue.
- However, when we add a more saturated blue, the original blue shape looks let saturated, and not really 'blue'.
- This process can be repeated, contrasting more and more, until we get the primary blue, absolute blue, and the rest become very desaturated, looks paler, greyer, duller. etc.
- The same process can be applied to other colours, and tints. (for example, adding white)
- Contrast of Hue, Tone and Saturation, all work in this sense.
Contrast of Extension
- Former by assigning proportional field sizes in relation to the visual weight of a colour. Also known as the proportion.
- Assigning different subjective values to colours, certain colours have certain weights.
- Blue would appear the heaviest, as it's the darkest, Yellow would appear the lightest, as it's the lightest, and Red would be the mid tone.
- We have have less Violet, and more Yellow to have a visual balance.
- In relation to this, we can have less Yellow and more Violet, and we see a stand-out balance.
- If we talk about imbalance, one of this colours is going to jump out. (see slides)
- Using stripes of violet creates an imbalance, and it's easier to look at a block of violet.
- However, then these stripes are spaces out across a bigger area of yellow, your field of view increases, and it become almost easier to look at.It affects our ability to see those colours accurately.
- Hierarchy - spacial quality also applies, as it would with type.
- High contrast colours, always, jump out at you.
- Small amounts of colour, with large amounts of colour work better. Don't use the same amount of colour.
Contrast of Temperature
- Formed by juxtaposing hues that can be considered "warm" or 'cool'.
- The warmest colour would be something which sits in the red-orange area
- The coolest would be in the blue-green area.
- In-between we have colour which movie from the warm to the cool, and vice-versa, on both sides.
- Taking a mid red and pushing it towards violet, you're making it cooler.
- However, this makes the red look more orange, making it look warmer.
- If you add a more orange red, it makes the original red look cooler, and the violet look even cooler.
- However in contrast this makes the orange look warmer.
- The middle section, which is a flat colour, appears to look like a gradient (see slide)
- If you place colours of the decreasing temperature, next to each other in a gradual pattern, it looks like a gradient.
- We can see the (above) colours are separate colours, with black bars in-between them, but when the black is taken away, it's a gradient.
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