Basics Design: Design Thinking

(Ben Green) #1

Thinking in colour


Magenta


Red


Cyan


Yellow


Blue Green


The colour wheel
The colour wheel can be used by a designer to make colour selections. There
are myriad colours available but designers often stick to a limited colour palette
that they are familiar with. Designers can use the colour wheel to inform colour
scheme selections and try new combinations.

The wheel is the colour spectrum displayed as a circle in order to visually explain
colour theory, the scientific body of knowledge about light. The wheel features
the subtractive primary colours – cyan, magenta and yellow (these are used in
printing); the secondary colours – red, green and blue (produced from any two
primary colours used in equal proportions) and the tertiary colours, which have
equal mixtures or strengths of a primary colour and the adjacent secondary
colour on the colour wheel.

Compatible colour selections
Monochrome:any single colour.
Complementary or contrasting:colours that face each other.
Split complementary colours:two colours adjacent to the complement of
the principal colour.
Mutual complements:a triad of equidistant colours and the complementary
colour of one of them.
Analogous colours:two colours on either side of a chosen colour (any three
consecutive colour segments).
Triad colours:any three equidistant colours.
Near complement:the colour adjacent to the complement of the
principal colour.
Double complements:two adjacent colours and their two complements.

Design Thinking


Refinement


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Title: Basic Design-Thinking
Client: QPL Size: 160mmx230mm

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