Colour Mixing Essentials

  • Uploaded by: cgermainee
  • 0
  • 0
  • January 2021
  • PDF

This document was uploaded by user and they confirmed that they have the permission to share it. If you are author or own the copyright of this book, please report to us by using this DMCA report form. Report DMCA


Overview

Download & View Colour Mixing Essentials as PDF for free.

More details

  • Words: 3,470
  • Pages:
Loading documents preview...
COLOUR MIXING

ESSENTIALS By Peter Keegan



Tutor Page 1

LESSON 1 - THE COLOUR WHEEL There are an infinite number of colours in the world, which can be overwhelming to an artist. However, all the colours you’ll ever need, regardless of subject matter or medium, can be made from a simplified colour spectrum or colour wheel.

There are lots of different variations of the colour wheel but they are all essentially very similar. They are made up of:

Page 2

Primary Colours

RED

BLUE

YELLOW

Primary colours cannot be mixed or made by combining other colours.

Secondary Colours

VIOLET (RED + BLUE)

GREEN (YELLOW + BLUE)

ORANGE (RED + YELLOW)

Secondary colours are made by mixing two of the primary colours together.

Tertiary Colours These are made by mixing a primary colour and its neighbouring secondary colour on the colour wheel.

Page 3

PRIMARY TERTIARY

TERTIARY

SECONDARY

SECONDARY

TERTIARY

TERTIARY

PRIMARY

PRIMARY

TERTIARY

TERTIARY SECONDARY

OTHER TERMS TO NOTE Tint A tint is any colour with white added to it. Adding white will make a colour lighter and also neutralise the natural bright hue.

Shade A shade is any colour with black added to it. Adding black will make a colour darker and also neutralise the natural bright hue.

Tone A tone is any colour with both black and white (grey) added to it. A colour with grey added is said to be ‘toned down’.

Page 4

LESSON 2 - COLOUR RELATIVITY Look at the following image of a Rubik's cube by Beau Lotto:

Rubiks Cube image by Beau Lotto.

The orange and brown squares above are identical in colour. The reason they appear different is because of the colours surrounding them. This phenomenon is known as colour relativity or comparative colour. The human eye can only see colours in the context of the colours around them. Here’s another example:

Page 5

It appears as though there are red and pink squares in the image on the left. In actual fact, they are the same colour, which you can see when the green squares are removed in the image on the right. The ‘pink’ squares are surrounded by white and the ‘red’ squares are surrounded by green, and it’s that neighbouring colour that makes all the difference to how you perceive things.

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR ARTISTS? You see an object and you expect it to be a certain colour I.e. a New York cab is yellow and an English post box is red - and this is their native or local colour. But when you observe closely, within those objects will be all kinds of colours quite different to their local colour. There might be greys, browns, purples and so on. If you don’t closely observe and just go from what you think the object’s colour should be, you’ll make poor colour mixing choices. Paint what you see, not what you think you see.

Page 6

LESSON 3 - REFLECTED LIGHT Light that falls onto any object you are painting can be divided into two types:

• Direct light • Reflected light

Direct Light This comes from a main light source, such as the sun or an artificial lamp. Direct light creates the lightest areas on an object.

Reflected Light This is light that bounces off other objects, such as a wall, floor or other objects close by. Reflected light is the most apparent in areas that are in shadow.

DIRECT LIGHT

REFLECTED LIGHT

Page 7

Reflected light, and the colours it can cast into areas where you least expect them, can be tricky to see at first. But adding them to your work can both enhance the sense of form and add extra interest to your subject.

Page 8

LESSON 4 - COLOUR TEMPERATURE Generally speaking, colours can be divided into one of two temperature categories:

• Warm colours • Cool colours

Warm Colours Warm colours are typically those found in the red, orange and yellow side of the colour wheel. Warmer cooler typically advance subjects towards the foreground.

Cool Colours Cool colours are those found in the blue, purple and green side of the colour wheel. White is technically the coolest colour so adding white make it cooler. Cooler colours typically recede subjects into the background. A colour’s temperature isn’t set in stone and is relative to other colours it’s compared to. Look at these examples:

Here, the green card is cooler than the yellow

However, when placed next to this cool blue, the green becomes warm

And even the cool blue can be classed as warm if placed next to an even cooler blue

Page 9

While some colours are obviously very warm (a bright, fiery red or orange), and some are very clearly cool (a pale, mint green), some colours are difficult to identify as warm or cool. Neutral and pastel colours can be particularly difficult to class as warm or cool, even when placed alongside each other. But don’t worry about that now, at this stage you just need to have an awareness of what colour temperature is.

Page 10

LESSON 5 - COLOUR VALUE A colour’s value is how light or dark that colour is. It’s one of the most important qualities to recreate when mixing your colours. You can easily identify a colour’s value, or how light/dark it is by converting it to black and white. In the example below, it’s obvious that the green is darker and so has greater value than the yellow:

However, very different colours can all have exactly the same value. In other words, they can be as light or as dark as each other:

Value is what creates form in your paintings. When you paint an object with form, you give the illusion that it is three-dimensional -

Page 11

that the viewer can reach in and grab it - rather than it just being a series of marks on a flat, two-dimensional painting surface. If you paint a simple object with different colours but pay no attention to value, the viewer may be able distinguish the various shapes within that object, but it won’t look solid. It will lack form:

In the left hand cube no regard has been made to value, with all the colours the same strength of value. In the right hand cube, appropriate value has been applied to each face. Now look at the difference when the cubes are reduced to greyscale values as below.

Page 12

HOW TO JUDGE VALUE Use a Camera Phone Any reasonably modern phone with a camera will allow you to edit a photo and convert it to black and white. This means you can take photos of your painting, reference material and even palette as you’re progressing.

Squint Your Eyes Squinting and defocusing your eyes has the effect of dulling down colour and slowing you to judge values more easily. Look at the coloured disc on the next page. Which colour is darker (has greater value) - the green segment or the pink segment? If you squint your eyes you should see all of the colours start to merge into one value. The green and pink have the same amount of value - as do all the other colours!

Page 13

EXERCISE 1. On the page below you’ll find a grey scale split into two strips. Print the page, cut out the strips and lay them end-to-end (lightest to darkest) on a hard, flat surface. 2.

On page 16 you’ll find a series of 15 coloured squares. Print this page and cut them out.

3. Give yourself one to two minutes to lay the coloured squares underneath the value scale in what you believe to be the correct position. 4. Once complete, take an overhead photo with your camera phone and convert to black and white to see how you’ve done.

Page 14

Page 15

Page 16

LESSON 6 - MIXING MUDDY COLOURS There are no pure colours. Every colour in your paint box will lean slightly towards another colour - even the primary colours of red, blue and yellow. This is known as colour’s bias. For example, a lemon yellow contains a hint of blue, making it cooler and more acidic. A cadmium yellow on the other hand, contains a hint of red, making it warmer.

Lemon yellow has a blue bias, making it cooler

Cadmium yellow has a red bias, making it warmer

In a later lesson, being able to identify the colour bias of the colours on your palette will help you mix more accurate colours, in less time.

EMBRACE ‘MUDDY’ COLOURS The vast majority of colours you’ll need for a painting will be wide variation of muted colours or tones.

Page 17

A muted tone in this case is simply some mixture of all three primaries (red, plus blue, plus yellow) and white. It’s very unlikely that any subject matter you paint will comprise completely of bright, saturated hues. If it did, it would look garish and detract from any sense of realism or artistic design. Instead, the majority of your painting should comprise of more muted tones, with small amounts of vibrant colour where you want the viewer’s attention to be drawn.

Hold My Hand - Peter Keegan, 2017

Page 18

AVOIDING TOO MANY MUDDY COLOURS If you find yourself mixing a lot of muddy colours, that look overworked and are too brown or too grey, try the following rule of thumb:

Avoid using more than three colours on your palette to mix a new colour Also, avoid over-blending your colours on either the palette or painting surface. Remember, the colour you see will almost always be less saturated than you think. In other words, it will have less vibrancy, less intense colour than you appear to be observing. For example:

The colour your brain thinks it’s observing

The actual colour that you need to mix

Page 19

LESSON 7 - MIXING ACCURATE COLOURS: PART 1 Watch the video demonstration of this lesson, then complete the exercise below.

EXERCISE On your palette, lay out three primary colours and white. Peter uses cadmium red, cadmium yellow and ultramarine blue. Print out the coloured squares on the following page and mix them as closely as possible using just your three primaries and white.

Tips

• Focus first and foremost on matching the value (lightness or darkness) of each coloured square.

• As you mix your colour, think about whether it needs to be darker

or lighter. Ask what colours you could add to make it lighter (i.e. yellow or white) and what colours you could add to make it darker (i.e. red or blue).

• Add more of a darker or lighter colour to adjust the value as you

need - but only add it to half your initial mix. This way you have a bit of the original mix to experiment further with.

• As you add that darker or lighter colour to adjust the value, ask

yourself whether the temperature of the colour is becoming too warm or too cool.

• If it’s becoming too warm or too cool, try adding one of the other

colours on your palette to address that (but don’t lose the value!).

Page 20

Watercolourists If you’re following this exercise with watercolours, you can obviously forgo the white. To lighten the value of a colour mix, you can add more water to it. To darken the value, use a stronger mix of paint with less water. With watercolour, you may have to paint more than one layer (allowing the previous one to dry) to get a very accurate colour match. Don’t worry about that at this stage - mix the closest colour you can in value and temperature. Remember: watercolours will dry up to 50% lighter than when you first add them to the paper. Mix darker, stronger colours than you think and judge the result when it dries.

Page 21

LESSON 8 - MIXING ACCURATE COLOURS: PART 2 Watch the video demonstration of this lesson, then complete the exercise below.

EXERCISE Using the colours from the last exercise and the reference photo on the following page, mix an area of flesh colour from the middle of the girl’s cheek. Try first and foremost to match the value (darkness or lightness of colour). Next, choose an area of dark brown from her hair and repeat the process. Finally, choose an area of shadow on her cheek and mix that.

Page 22

Page 23

LESSON 9 - TRICKY COLOURS Some colours will be tricky to mix from just three primaries on your palette. It’s probably less than you think so give yourself plenty of opportunity to mix a colour from just three primaries and white. However, when you come across a colour that you just can’t seem to mix, it’s time to add an additional colour to your palette. A good rule of thumb is to add another primary colour that is opposite in temperate to the primary you have already selected. Here are some examples:

Cool Yellows

Cool Blues

• Lemon yellow • Hanza yellow light • Cadmium yellow

• Cerulean blue • Pthalo blue • Prussian blue

Warm Yellows

Warm Blues

light

• Yellow ochre • New gamboge • Cadmium yellow medium & deep

• Ultramarine blue • Cobalt blue • Indrathene blue

Cool Reds

• Permanent rose • Alizarin crimson • Rose madder Warm Reds

• Cadmium red • Vermillion • Light red

Page 24

LESSON 10 - THE POWER OF COMPLEMENTARIES Colours that are immediately opposite each other on the colour wheel are called complementary colours.

So the complementary colour of red is green. The complementary colour of yellow is violet. The complementary colour of blue is orange.

Page 25

Complementary colours placed next to each other can enhance the effect of one another, making them appear even more vibrant and dazzling.

Impression, Sunrise - Claude Monet, 1872

In the above painting by Claude Monet, he has used the complementary colour of blue (orange) to achieve a buzzing and an atmospheric effect. A painting that consists of predominantly one colour or colour string (i.e. mostly greens) with some vibrant spots of complementary colour (i.e. red) can become a very strong visual design.

Page 26

The following painting is made up mainly of green tones:

The addition of some complementary colour, in this case red, can really add extra interest and becomes more engaging to the viewer:

Page 27

Here’s a another example where a complementary colour has been used to draw attention to the focal point of the painting:

Page 28

LESSON 11 - MIXING COMPLEMENTARIES Mixing complementary colours together has the opposite effect of placing them next to each other - it creates a duller, toned down colour. This is because you are effectively mixing all three primaries of red, yellow and blue when you mix any two complementaries together. Mixing all three primaries in various proportions is a great way to mix ‘mud’ - browns, greys and even blacks - and very often you want those colours.

PURPOSEFULLY MIXING ‘MUD’ We’ve seen from an earlier lesson, that toned down and more neutral colours should usually make up the bulk of a painting. However, ‘toned down’ does not necessarily mean brown or grey. If your painting consists of too many muddy browns and greys, instead of ‘coloured’ tones, it can negatively impact the entire look the image.

Muddy tones

Coloured tones

Page 29

To avoid mixing mud (unless you want it), avoid mixing colours in equal quantities, where no single colour is more dominant. Instead, have a dominant colour with small proportions of its complementary mixed into it. In the following example, lemon yellow has been toned down with its complementary, purple. Equal measures of yellow and purple create a muddy brown in the centre. The left hand side of the colour string is where the yellow dominates but is toned down with the addition of the complementary.

And here’s another example of red being toned down with green (or vice versa):

Page 30

LESSON 12 - OPTICAL BLENDING A different approach to mixing colours on your palette is to either place them side-by-side or on top of one another (after the previous layer has dried). This type of colour mixing is called optical blending and it’s your eye (or brain) that does the mixing. It was developed by Pointillists such as Georges Seurat. In the close up below of Claude Monet’s The Japanese Footbridge, a layer of wet paint is dragged across a layer of dry paint. The texture of the dry brush strokes underneath break up the freshly applied brushstrokes on top of them, revealing both sets of colours:

The Japanese Footbridge, Sunrise - Claude Monet, 1920-1922

Page 31

Placing Colours Side-By-Side & On Top of Each Other Here’s a series of blues dabbed next to and on top of each other. They aren’t mixed at any stage - instead your eye is left to interpret an overall blue colour:

Using Washes or Glazes The example below starts with a light wash of yellow, which is allowed to dry. A thin wash of blue is then glazed over the top. Even though the yellow and blue are not mixed together, the yellow underlay showing through the thin wash of blue is read by the eye as a green.

Page 32

Scumbling A green base is applied first and allowed to dry or almost dry. This might represent a large area within a landscape painting. A broken or hit and miss line of dusty red is then dragged over the top. From a typical viewing distance, this will give the impression of brown tones, as your eye optically mixes the red with the green.

Page 33

LESSON 13 - ANALOGOUS & TERTIARY COLOURS Colours that are from the same area on the colour wheel are known as harmonies. Using harmonies in a painting can create a calm and tranquil atmosphere that has a real unity to it. The unity comes from fewer colours and therefore less opportunity for colour clashes. Paintings made up of harmonies can lack drama. To make up for this, you can use bold values (very strong darks and very light lights) or add a few vibrant spot colours in places. The two most common ranges of harmonious colours are:

• Tertiary colours • Analogous colours

TERTIARY COLOURS A tertiary colour is made by mixing a primary and one of its neighbouring secondary colours on the colour wheel. For example, blue (primary) mixed with violet (secondary) will give you a blue-violet tertiary colour.

Page 34

TERTIARY COLOURS

ANALOGOUS COLOURS Analogous colours are groups of three or four colours that are next to each other on the colour wheel. They usually match well and create serene and comfortable designs. You’ll often find them in nature. Select any colour on the colour wheel as your dominant colour, and then using the two or three colours surrounding it, add those to your palette. You can of course use white and black to create tints, shades and tones.

Page 35

ANALOGOUS COLOURS

NOTE: while the above image shows sets of colours divided neatly around the wheel, you could select any three or four colours next to each other (i.e. mix of blues and greens, or reds and oranges for example.

Again, you can conservatively add accents of the complementary colour to your dominant colour, around the focal point. Here’s an example analogous colour palette, where the left-most blue is the dominant colour and the orange is the accent complementary:

Page 36

LESSON 14 - PALETTE MANAGEMENT How do you lay out your colours on your palette? There is no right and wrong answer but whatever system you choose, it pays to be consistent. By doing this, you’ll get to know where each colour is, picking them up automatically. It can really speed up your mixing and decision making. Here are three palette management choices:

Option 1: Warm to Cool

Arrange your colours from warmest at one end to coolest at the other end, with black and white at far ends.

Page 37

Option 2: Light to Dark

Arrange your colours from lightest to darkest (white through to black) or vice versa.

Option 3: Spectrum

Arrange your palette according to the colour spectrum (red, orange, yellow, green, blue / indigo, violet). Earth tones at the end.

Page 38

LESSON 15 - COLOUR PALETTES The colours yo choose to layout on your palette will ultimately determine the look and feel of your painting. A palette of earthy browns and dark values will look quite traditional due to the limited colours available hundreds of years ago. A palette with brighter, vivid colours will result in a more modern contemporary feel. Here are some examples of palettes from famous artists:

Page 39

Page 40

Related Documents

Colour Mixing Essentials
January 2021 3
Mixing
January 2021 3
Mixing 99%
February 2021 2
Laporan Mixing
February 2021 3
Makalah Mixing
February 2021 1

More Documents from "Asha Herda Afianti"

Colour Mixing Essentials
January 2021 3