Principles and Elements of Design
Principles and Elements of Design
OF DESIGN
There are two basic ways which design is
applied: a. design by printing; and b. design
by weaving.
Intermediate Colors
stem from the
combination of primary
and secondary colors.
Tertiary colors are
made by mixing either
one primary color with
one secondary color,
or two secondary
colors. Tertiary colors
are a combination of
full saturation of one
primary color plus half
saturation of another
primary color and
none of a third primary
color
Neutral colors are the white, black and gray and are
predominantly grayish and brownish. They are sometimes
called “earth tones.”
Value is the lightness or darkness of color.
White added to a color will produce tints.
For example, pink is a tint of red. Black
added to a color will produce shades.
Maroon is a shade of red.
Intensity or chroma is of a color
corresponds to its purity and saturation in
a color other than black, white and gray.
COLOR SCHEMES (COLOR HARMONIES):
Monochrome or
one color harmony
includes only one
color of different
value.
Adjacent colors
(also called
analogous colors)
uses colors that
neighbor each other
on the color wheel.
Colors opposite each other on the color wheel
are called complementary colors.
A single split
complementary uses a
primary color plus
colors on either side of
its complement.
A double split
complementary (also
called tetradic) uses
two pairs of
complements, one
apart on the color
wheel.
A triad uses
colors at the
points of an
equilateral
triangle (three
colors spaced
equally on the
color wheel).
PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF COLORS ON
PEOPLE