Summary of chapter 7 Use Color
with Purpose
The God said that
there is the light first and then the whole world in the genesis of bible.
Similarly, there is the light first and then the color. Color is not a natural
or physical property of a material or an object, it “appears as a reaction to
the light that shines upon an object and is reflected or transmitted to our
eyes.” (page 140)
“Color creates a
mood, attract attention, and conveys meaning. It can add visual appeal, improve
usability, and enable learning.” (page 135) So how to choose appropriate color
to appeal viewers and simulating students’ positive reaction in learning is
important.
Although different
people’ reaction to color may different because of culture, psychology,
physiology, individual experience and past history, there are some common
responses to colors for most people. Color preferences can convey positive or
negative feelings that bright and simulating colors can excite or arousal
people; dark colors can disappoint people or evoking some unhappy memories;
neutral or serene colors can deliver a peaceful and relaxed feeling to people.
In addition, color
can motivate students’ learning process and evoke some positive emotions. For
instance, use cool colors to decorate classroom in summer can help students
calm down quickly and gather attention to study. Learning progress of students
in low grades can be exactly promoted by providing colorful textbook and
materials. And color is also valuable for enhancing storytelling that a red
face can convey anger and black face can convey embarrassment or speechless
feeling.
But before we
practice relative color utilization in design, we should get clear about
necessary theories of color in the forefront.
Hue, saturation and
value are three visual properties of the color, and it also has a hidden
psychological property, temperature. Hue is the pure version of a color such as
red or black; saturation is the amount of gray added to a color, it can
influence the intensity of a color; value is the brightness of a color which
relates to darkness or lightness, tint or shade; and temperature reflects to
the subjective feeling of a color that red or orange and adjacent colors
indicate warm, blue or green and similar colors will convey a cold feeling to
human.
Beside color
properties, there are some different color models for designers to choose as
well. Red-green-blue or RGB model is usually used for displaying on screen
which address hexadecimal codes to represent different colors for users to
choose. CMYK model is for image printing and HSV reflects the three properties
used to describe colors. And red-yellow-blue or RYB model is which we always
used in normal life that it has primary, secondary and tertiary colors. Primary
colors are red, yellow and blue which can’t be create by any other colors.
Secondary colors are three colors mixed by each two primary colors and tertiary
colors are six colors mixed by secondary colors and adjacent primary colors.
Better understanding
of these theories of color can help designers a lot on selecting proper and
harmonious palette. But choosing a palette or color scheme for design is not easy
to do because designers should make sure the palette they chose can authentically
promote a positive experience, avoid causing eye fatigue, project the
appropriate mood or personality and be appropriate for the audience and
content. (page 144) And the most of all, their palette choosing must comfort
people who have color vision deficiency because they are not so sensitive about
the difference between various colors like normal people. Designers can use
hyperlinks, keys and legends or text hint to try their best to help them to
recognize and distinguish different colors, it’s necessary.
For specific palette
choosing, designers also need consider color harmonies and interactions.
“Just as audio
harmony sounds pleasant o our ears, color harmony is pleasing to the eyes.”
(page 148) An easy way to reach for harmony is selecting three colors that are
adjacent to each other, one as the dominant color and the other two as
supplement. Designers can also choose complementary palette to augment contrast
for a unique harmony. Colors are not seen in isolation that they can be
affected be surrounding colors. So designers can choose surrounding colors with
contrary value or saturation to highlight some significant or important color.
All right. RGB colors are primary for the use of light. While Red, Yellow, and Blue are primary pigment colors for physical color manifestation. When all colors are mixed in light one gets white, while when all physical colors are mixed one gets black. However, the mixture of physical colors usually is depicted as CYMK (for Cyan, Yellow, Magenta, and Black) rather than using RYB that easily could be confused with RGB.
ReplyDeleteGood reflection comments.