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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DALIMHE-DTP^1Title: Basic Design-Thinking
Client: QPL Size: 160mmx230mmblack text