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Understanding color
Chapter 8: Color Harmony
Beauty is the quality of an object or
experience that gives pleasure to one or
         more of the senses.
A color can be beautiful...
or a sound...
...or a scent.
Delight in the presence of beauty is as
  natural to the human condition as
               breathing.
Harmony is the happy condition that follows
 when two or more different things are sensed
 together as a single, pleasing experience.
Harmony is perceived as:


      complete

      continuous

      natural
Harmony is intuitive; a feeling that things are just
               as they should be.
In a harmonious
situation everything
is in balance;
everything belongs.
Happy families live in harmony.
Barbershop quartets sing in harmony.
A hermit lives
  in harmony
  with nature.
Harmonious experiences are without gaps
             or surprises.
Color harmony occurs when two or more colors are
 sensed together as a single, pleasing, collective
                  impression.
A single color can be beautiful,
 but it cannot be harmonious.
Harmony requires a
grouping of elements.
A key characteristic of harmonious colorings is that they
           seem effortless and uncontrived.
Not every color in a harmonious relationship has to be a
                     “pleasing” color.
These are not particularly “beautiful” colors...
But your eye needs them to bring harmony to all the
          competing colors in this art quilt.
In some cases, harmony may not be the
      goal of your color problem.
In this painting by Ludwig Kirchner, the idea was to
present a scene that seemed a little unsettling. The
                  colors help do that.
Kirchner and
     Edvard Munch
were both part of a
   group of painters
from the early 20th
      century called
  Expressionists
  that used color to
           heighten
 emotional tension.
Color can be used
in all kinds of ways
   to create various
       effects called
      color effects.
Color effects fall into two broad categories:


             color harmony
             visual impact
They are really two polar ends to a continuum with
           many variations in between.
The important thing is to know what your goal is and to
use your knowledge about colors to achieve that goal.
Intervals

 and Harmony
Because of
the human
need for logic,
even
intervals are
the most
pleasing and
harmonious
type of color
intervals to
use.
You can force
colors that seem
incompatible to
achieve a sort of
harmony by
creating intervals
between them.
In this case, intervals were established not just
   between the two colors but also beyond them.
In this case, intervals were established not just
   between the two colors but also beyond them.
Creating a series of intervals between unrelated
 colors is a principal way in which they can be
     transformed into a harmonious group.
Another way
to use
intervals is to
enrich a
sparse color
palette by
adding
intervals.
If colors are similar in value and an overall effect seems
    flat, adding steps of value (without changing hues)
                   accomplishes this also.
If colors are similar in value and an overall effect seems
    flat, adding steps of value (without changing hues)
                   accomplishes this also.
The arrangement of intervals is not necessarily important.
The progressive intervals are inherently harmonious no matter
             how the appear in the composition.
Just remember that even intervals of any color quality
(hue, value, saturation, or any mixture of these) within
 the same composition tend to be more pleasing than
  random intervals no matter how they are arranged.
Hue

and Harmony
Historically, the search for color harmony has focused
on the relationship between hues, and more specifically,
   on the link between harmony and complementary
                          colors.
As Goethe
first said,
the eyes
find
equilibrium
in the
presence of
all three
primaries.
But not every pleasing palette is made
         up of complements.
When a single hue is used in a variety of
   values or saturations, it is called
    monochromatic and is very
             harmonious.
Analogous colors (colors next to each other
  on the color wheel) also create a very
       harmonious color scheme.
In fact, any hues used together can be
    harmonious if used correctly.
Learning how to achieve this is what this class is
                  all about!
Value

and Harmony
Although the principal function of value is as
contrast that creates separation between figure
and ground, traditional color theory offers three
ideas about value and harmony:



     Even intervals of value are harmonious
     Middle values are harmonious
     Equal values in different hues are harmonious
A range of values
 does not have to
  extend from the
 extremes of light
     to dark to be
     pleasing, nor
does it have to be
    arranged in a
            linear
     progression.
(...although Professor Haas might give the painting
   on the left an A+ and the one on the right an A.)
Intervals of value will be seen as harmonious as
     long as steps are equidistantly spaced.
Only the oak leaf changes value intervals.
All other leaves are identical on both compositions.
When the same
image is
illustrated using
well-spaced
steps of value
and again with
irregular steps,
the even-interval
version will
almost invariably
be chosen as
preferable.
This is just
another example
of how EVEN
intervals are
always going
to be more
harmonious than
uneven ones.
All four of these
compositions
use even
intervals of
value. All create
a certain sense
of harmony no
matter how they
are arranged in
the composition.
The second premise, that “middle values are
harmonious,” implies that hues at the extremes of
         light or dark are unpleasing.
But remember that middle values include everything
     but the very ends of the value spectrum.
There is plenty
of light and dark
variation in the
middle value
range.
In addition to the
actual value
range of “middle”
values, there are
inherent
differences in
value between
the different
hues (like
violet/dark and
yellow/light).
It is true that middle values are often selected
as preferable over their much darker or lighter
                    variations.
Middle values are
easy to see and easy
to identify. Viewers
will always select first
those colors that can
be discriminated
from others with a
minimum of effort.
It is more correct
to say that middle
values are
preferred.
All values, including extreme darks and lights, are
   equal in their potential to create harmonious
                      palettes.
The final premise, that “equal values are harmonious,”
          has two distinctly different aspects:
First, hues of
   close or equal
    value can be
  pleasing when
they are used as
   carried colors
        against a
      contrasting
 darker or lighter
           ground.
You lose the
  forward and back
 impression that
     is associated
with the contrast
of dark and light,
but the presence
   of many colors
offers a different
   kind of interest
  and liveliness.
Hues of
    close or
 equal value
 also create
     elegant
  harmonies
   without a
 contrasting
ground when
   no image is
     intended.
If your intention is to create a pleasing
 background, you can’t do better than
     different hues of similar value.
saturation

 and Harmony
Color compositions tend to be most
successful when the overall level of
  saturation is relatively constant.
This doesn’t mean
that every color has
the same saturation,
but that the different
saturations are
balanced to
produce an overall
effect.
When a single
saturation is
different and
isolated, it tends to
become the focal
point.
Complex compositions that include different levels
 of saturation call for a studied balance between
            vivid and muted elements.
Bright and dull
   elements are
       composed
      together to
 create a single,
      cumulative
    effect that is
brighter or more
          muted.
When a single
   pure color is
 inserted into a
muted palette, it
        will pop
       forward.
As in all instances of the use of color, it is
important to remember your goal. Remember
that more saturated colors spring forward and
 make less saturated colors appear duller by
                  comparison.
Use
saturation to
draw attention
to your main
subject.
Use saturation wisely!
It has been argued that muted colors are naturally more
harmonious than saturated colors because the eye is at
          rest in the presence of muted color.
Brilliant colors are exciting and muted ones are calming,
but neither is inherently more harmonious than the other.
Only the relationship between colors creates color
   harmony, not the colors themselves. Harmonious
 compositions are possible with colors at any level of
                     saturation.
Professor Haas contends that muted colors are more
often seen in nature and are therefore more calming to
                          us.
major and minor themes
Many complex colorings have an additional
            characteristic:
   a dominant hue family enlivened by
   smaller areas of the complement.
Color compositions in which two or more
hue families compete for equal attention
are often less successful than those with
     major-minor hue relationships.
Some harmonious
  conclusions
A central feature of successful harmonies is
               completeness.
The ground is often the largest single area in a
 composition, and that idea of completeness includes
consideration of the color of the ground, even when it is
                      simply white.
Remember that even white is not absolute; all whites have
      undertones of some other hue in them.
Blacks and grays, too, carry undertones. There are green-
   blacks, blue-blacks, violet-blacks, and brown-blacks.
A well-chosen ground means the difference between a
fully realized color harmony and a less satisfying one.
Following the
    guidelines for color
     harmony does not
       guarantee that a
particular colorway will
have universal appeal
      because there is
 always an element of
 personal bias in color
            preference.
However, it is true that a great deal of what we find
harmonious originates as involuntary responses of the
eyes and mind. The brain has a built-in bias for certain
                 kinds of combinations.
A person’s
perception of
harmony is
influenced by the
eye’s need for
equilibrium...
...the comfort level of vision,
...the human
need for logic in
perception,
...and each
individual’s
emotional
response.
An instinct for what is harmonious can be trusted
because the eyes dictate boundaries of comfort.
We enjoy the accidental beauties of nature, but in
design, harmony is not accidental; it is deliberate.
The designer creates
each new palette, and
the designer’s intent
  determines whether
        that palette is
       harmonious or
           otherwise.
Hopefully, all
these “guidelines”
        for creating
   harmony won’t
   stifle your own
    creative spirit.
No new idea ever
grew from sticking
       to the rules.
What does make sense is to
consider some observations
   about color harmony:
1. No single factor determines color
             harmony.
2. The complementary relationship between hues
 is a strong basis for harmony, but it is not the only
   basis. Any hues used together can be harmonious.
3. Even intervals between colors contribute to
harmony. Even intervals are pleasing whether they exist
  between hue, value, saturation, or any combination of
                         these.
4. Color compositions tend to be harmonious
when the level of saturation is relatively constant.
5. Compositions of many colors tend to be most
successful when a dominant family of analogous
   hues is supported by smaller areas of their
                 complements.
beyond harmony:
 dissonant colors
If color harmony is the “good child” of design,
its polar opposite is disharmony, or dissonance.
Dissonant colorways are disturbing.
Colors do not seem to belong with each
                other.
Disharmony
communicates
imbalance,
unease,
edginess, chaos;
a sense that
something is
missing or is off-
kilter.
Dissonant
colorings can be
dynamic and
exciting–not
pleasing perhaps,
but certainly a
way to draw
attention.
When the guidelines of color harmony are
deliberately ignored, the result may startle or
    repel, but it may also be memorable.
Unpleasing
colorways have
      their own
      stengths.
high-impact color
Some design
 problems call for
         colors or
combinations that
 will draw instant
         attention.
The strongest
     images are
 created by high
  value contrast
alone, a graphic
      power that
requires no hue.
The addition (not
the substitution) of
brilliant color to an
  already powerful
    image does not
          change the
      strength of the
       image. It only
 affects how long it
   takes to capture
         the viewer’s
            attention.
Colors that are both hue-intensive and light-reflecting, like
 a strong tint of red-violet, or a saturated yellow-green,
            have an eye-catching immediacy.
Only a few saturated hues are truly high-impact.
The range of violets,
  for example, is not
       light-reflecting
     enough to draw
immediate attention.
For instance, when a
highly visible violet is
   called for, a strong
           tint is used.
Working with high-
 impact colors is not
      necessarily an
  alternative to color
harmony. Colorings
can be both brilliant
    and harmonious.
Brilliant colors used together without some intervening
value contrast are likely to vibrate, so although they draw
 immediate attention, they are poor candidates for good
                          readability.
However, when these colors contrast sharply with their
surroundings, they are useful in communicating nonverbal
                        warnings.
The Occupational Safety
and Health Administration
 (OSHA) uses high-impact
colors symbolically to alert
 for specific dangers–a tint
of violet for radiation, vivid
      orange for hazardous
                  situations.
Fluorescent colors, sometimes called neon or
“DayGlo” colors, are an extreme of high-impact color.
They include a
colorant that
absorbs
wavelengths of light
from the UV range
(non-visible light) of
the spectrum and re-
emits it as visible
light.
High-impact color can also be used to direct attention.
An area of brilliant color set into a more muted palette
  injects an element of surprise into a composition.
It draws
     attention to
itself and away
        from the
    composition
     as a whole.
Surface
and Harmony
In the natural world, brilliant and subtly muted colors
coexist. The colors of nature are also fragmented and
could be better described as optical mixes than as flat
                           color.
Broken color, suggesting texture, invites a tactile
       response as well as a visual one.
Fragmented color responds to the human need for
        connection to the natural world.
Flat color has its own purpose and place in design. Where
 broken color suggest nature, hard-edged, flat colors are
                  dramatic and compelling.
Flat color has a discipline that responds to an
entirely different human need: the need to control.
The designer of a new electronic device is unlikely
  to specify coloring that suggests the texture of
                  autumn leaves.
A surface that is flat, sleek, and flawless offers an
             impression of precision.
The decision to use flat or broken color is a small but
 meaningful side trip on the road to successful color
                       choices.

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Chapter 8

  • 2. Beauty is the quality of an object or experience that gives pleasure to one or more of the senses.
  • 3. A color can be beautiful...
  • 6. Delight in the presence of beauty is as natural to the human condition as breathing.
  • 7. Harmony is the happy condition that follows when two or more different things are sensed together as a single, pleasing experience.
  • 8. Harmony is perceived as: complete continuous natural
  • 9. Harmony is intuitive; a feeling that things are just as they should be.
  • 10. In a harmonious situation everything is in balance; everything belongs.
  • 11. Happy families live in harmony.
  • 13. A hermit lives in harmony with nature.
  • 14. Harmonious experiences are without gaps or surprises.
  • 15. Color harmony occurs when two or more colors are sensed together as a single, pleasing, collective impression.
  • 16. A single color can be beautiful, but it cannot be harmonious.
  • 18. A key characteristic of harmonious colorings is that they seem effortless and uncontrived.
  • 19. Not every color in a harmonious relationship has to be a “pleasing” color.
  • 20. These are not particularly “beautiful” colors...
  • 21. But your eye needs them to bring harmony to all the competing colors in this art quilt.
  • 22. In some cases, harmony may not be the goal of your color problem.
  • 23. In this painting by Ludwig Kirchner, the idea was to present a scene that seemed a little unsettling. The colors help do that.
  • 24. Kirchner and Edvard Munch were both part of a group of painters from the early 20th century called Expressionists that used color to heighten emotional tension.
  • 25. Color can be used in all kinds of ways to create various effects called color effects.
  • 26. Color effects fall into two broad categories: color harmony visual impact
  • 27. They are really two polar ends to a continuum with many variations in between.
  • 28. The important thing is to know what your goal is and to use your knowledge about colors to achieve that goal.
  • 30. Because of the human need for logic, even intervals are the most pleasing and harmonious type of color intervals to use.
  • 31. You can force colors that seem incompatible to achieve a sort of harmony by creating intervals between them.
  • 32. In this case, intervals were established not just between the two colors but also beyond them.
  • 33. In this case, intervals were established not just between the two colors but also beyond them.
  • 34. Creating a series of intervals between unrelated colors is a principal way in which they can be transformed into a harmonious group.
  • 35. Another way to use intervals is to enrich a sparse color palette by adding intervals.
  • 36. If colors are similar in value and an overall effect seems flat, adding steps of value (without changing hues) accomplishes this also.
  • 37. If colors are similar in value and an overall effect seems flat, adding steps of value (without changing hues) accomplishes this also.
  • 38.
  • 39. The arrangement of intervals is not necessarily important. The progressive intervals are inherently harmonious no matter how the appear in the composition.
  • 40. Just remember that even intervals of any color quality (hue, value, saturation, or any mixture of these) within the same composition tend to be more pleasing than random intervals no matter how they are arranged.
  • 42. Historically, the search for color harmony has focused on the relationship between hues, and more specifically, on the link between harmony and complementary colors.
  • 43. As Goethe first said, the eyes find equilibrium in the presence of all three primaries.
  • 44. But not every pleasing palette is made up of complements.
  • 45. When a single hue is used in a variety of values or saturations, it is called monochromatic and is very harmonious.
  • 46.
  • 47. Analogous colors (colors next to each other on the color wheel) also create a very harmonious color scheme.
  • 48.
  • 49. In fact, any hues used together can be harmonious if used correctly.
  • 50. Learning how to achieve this is what this class is all about!
  • 52. Although the principal function of value is as contrast that creates separation between figure and ground, traditional color theory offers three ideas about value and harmony: Even intervals of value are harmonious Middle values are harmonious Equal values in different hues are harmonious
  • 53. A range of values does not have to extend from the extremes of light to dark to be pleasing, nor does it have to be arranged in a linear progression.
  • 54. (...although Professor Haas might give the painting on the left an A+ and the one on the right an A.)
  • 55. Intervals of value will be seen as harmonious as long as steps are equidistantly spaced.
  • 56. Only the oak leaf changes value intervals. All other leaves are identical on both compositions.
  • 57. When the same image is illustrated using well-spaced steps of value and again with irregular steps, the even-interval version will almost invariably be chosen as preferable.
  • 58. This is just another example of how EVEN intervals are always going to be more harmonious than uneven ones.
  • 59. All four of these compositions use even intervals of value. All create a certain sense of harmony no matter how they are arranged in the composition.
  • 60. The second premise, that “middle values are harmonious,” implies that hues at the extremes of light or dark are unpleasing.
  • 61. But remember that middle values include everything but the very ends of the value spectrum.
  • 62. There is plenty of light and dark variation in the middle value range.
  • 63. In addition to the actual value range of “middle” values, there are inherent differences in value between the different hues (like violet/dark and yellow/light).
  • 64. It is true that middle values are often selected as preferable over their much darker or lighter variations.
  • 65.
  • 66. Middle values are easy to see and easy to identify. Viewers will always select first those colors that can be discriminated from others with a minimum of effort.
  • 67. It is more correct to say that middle values are preferred.
  • 68. All values, including extreme darks and lights, are equal in their potential to create harmonious palettes.
  • 69. The final premise, that “equal values are harmonious,” has two distinctly different aspects:
  • 70. First, hues of close or equal value can be pleasing when they are used as carried colors against a contrasting darker or lighter ground.
  • 71. You lose the forward and back impression that is associated with the contrast of dark and light, but the presence of many colors offers a different kind of interest and liveliness.
  • 72. Hues of close or equal value also create elegant harmonies without a contrasting ground when no image is intended.
  • 73. If your intention is to create a pleasing background, you can’t do better than different hues of similar value.
  • 75. Color compositions tend to be most successful when the overall level of saturation is relatively constant.
  • 76. This doesn’t mean that every color has the same saturation, but that the different saturations are balanced to produce an overall effect.
  • 77. When a single saturation is different and isolated, it tends to become the focal point.
  • 78. Complex compositions that include different levels of saturation call for a studied balance between vivid and muted elements.
  • 79. Bright and dull elements are composed together to create a single, cumulative effect that is brighter or more muted.
  • 80. When a single pure color is inserted into a muted palette, it will pop forward.
  • 81. As in all instances of the use of color, it is important to remember your goal. Remember that more saturated colors spring forward and make less saturated colors appear duller by comparison.
  • 84. It has been argued that muted colors are naturally more harmonious than saturated colors because the eye is at rest in the presence of muted color.
  • 85. Brilliant colors are exciting and muted ones are calming, but neither is inherently more harmonious than the other.
  • 86. Only the relationship between colors creates color harmony, not the colors themselves. Harmonious compositions are possible with colors at any level of saturation.
  • 87. Professor Haas contends that muted colors are more often seen in nature and are therefore more calming to us.
  • 88. major and minor themes
  • 89. Many complex colorings have an additional characteristic: a dominant hue family enlivened by smaller areas of the complement.
  • 90.
  • 91. Color compositions in which two or more hue families compete for equal attention are often less successful than those with major-minor hue relationships.
  • 92.
  • 93. Some harmonious conclusions
  • 94. A central feature of successful harmonies is completeness.
  • 95. The ground is often the largest single area in a composition, and that idea of completeness includes consideration of the color of the ground, even when it is simply white.
  • 96. Remember that even white is not absolute; all whites have undertones of some other hue in them.
  • 97. Blacks and grays, too, carry undertones. There are green- blacks, blue-blacks, violet-blacks, and brown-blacks.
  • 98. A well-chosen ground means the difference between a fully realized color harmony and a less satisfying one.
  • 99. Following the guidelines for color harmony does not guarantee that a particular colorway will have universal appeal because there is always an element of personal bias in color preference.
  • 100. However, it is true that a great deal of what we find harmonious originates as involuntary responses of the eyes and mind. The brain has a built-in bias for certain kinds of combinations.
  • 101. A person’s perception of harmony is influenced by the eye’s need for equilibrium...
  • 102. ...the comfort level of vision,
  • 103. ...the human need for logic in perception,
  • 105. An instinct for what is harmonious can be trusted because the eyes dictate boundaries of comfort.
  • 106. We enjoy the accidental beauties of nature, but in design, harmony is not accidental; it is deliberate.
  • 107. The designer creates each new palette, and the designer’s intent determines whether that palette is harmonious or otherwise.
  • 108. Hopefully, all these “guidelines” for creating harmony won’t stifle your own creative spirit. No new idea ever grew from sticking to the rules.
  • 109. What does make sense is to consider some observations about color harmony:
  • 110. 1. No single factor determines color harmony.
  • 111. 2. The complementary relationship between hues is a strong basis for harmony, but it is not the only basis. Any hues used together can be harmonious.
  • 112. 3. Even intervals between colors contribute to harmony. Even intervals are pleasing whether they exist between hue, value, saturation, or any combination of these.
  • 113. 4. Color compositions tend to be harmonious when the level of saturation is relatively constant.
  • 114. 5. Compositions of many colors tend to be most successful when a dominant family of analogous hues is supported by smaller areas of their complements.
  • 116. If color harmony is the “good child” of design, its polar opposite is disharmony, or dissonance.
  • 117. Dissonant colorways are disturbing. Colors do not seem to belong with each other.
  • 118. Disharmony communicates imbalance, unease, edginess, chaos; a sense that something is missing or is off- kilter.
  • 119. Dissonant colorings can be dynamic and exciting–not pleasing perhaps, but certainly a way to draw attention.
  • 120. When the guidelines of color harmony are deliberately ignored, the result may startle or repel, but it may also be memorable.
  • 121. Unpleasing colorways have their own stengths.
  • 123. Some design problems call for colors or combinations that will draw instant attention.
  • 124. The strongest images are created by high value contrast alone, a graphic power that requires no hue.
  • 125. The addition (not the substitution) of brilliant color to an already powerful image does not change the strength of the image. It only affects how long it takes to capture the viewer’s attention.
  • 126. Colors that are both hue-intensive and light-reflecting, like a strong tint of red-violet, or a saturated yellow-green, have an eye-catching immediacy.
  • 127. Only a few saturated hues are truly high-impact.
  • 128. The range of violets, for example, is not light-reflecting enough to draw immediate attention.
  • 129. For instance, when a highly visible violet is called for, a strong tint is used.
  • 130. Working with high- impact colors is not necessarily an alternative to color harmony. Colorings can be both brilliant and harmonious.
  • 131. Brilliant colors used together without some intervening value contrast are likely to vibrate, so although they draw immediate attention, they are poor candidates for good readability.
  • 132. However, when these colors contrast sharply with their surroundings, they are useful in communicating nonverbal warnings.
  • 133. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) uses high-impact colors symbolically to alert for specific dangers–a tint of violet for radiation, vivid orange for hazardous situations.
  • 134. Fluorescent colors, sometimes called neon or “DayGlo” colors, are an extreme of high-impact color.
  • 135. They include a colorant that absorbs wavelengths of light from the UV range (non-visible light) of the spectrum and re- emits it as visible light.
  • 136. High-impact color can also be used to direct attention. An area of brilliant color set into a more muted palette injects an element of surprise into a composition.
  • 137. It draws attention to itself and away from the composition as a whole.
  • 139. In the natural world, brilliant and subtly muted colors coexist. The colors of nature are also fragmented and could be better described as optical mixes than as flat color.
  • 140. Broken color, suggesting texture, invites a tactile response as well as a visual one.
  • 141. Fragmented color responds to the human need for connection to the natural world.
  • 142. Flat color has its own purpose and place in design. Where broken color suggest nature, hard-edged, flat colors are dramatic and compelling.
  • 143.
  • 144. Flat color has a discipline that responds to an entirely different human need: the need to control.
  • 145. The designer of a new electronic device is unlikely to specify coloring that suggests the texture of autumn leaves.
  • 146. A surface that is flat, sleek, and flawless offers an impression of precision.
  • 147. The decision to use flat or broken color is a small but meaningful side trip on the road to successful color choices.