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LESSON 2. Intensity: is the brightness or dullness of a color A color is as bright as it will ever be as it comes from the tube; it cannot be made any.

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Presentation on theme: "LESSON 2. Intensity: is the brightness or dullness of a color A color is as bright as it will ever be as it comes from the tube; it cannot be made any."— Presentation transcript:

1 LESSON 2

2 Intensity: is the brightness or dullness of a color A color is as bright as it will ever be as it comes from the tube; it cannot be made any brighter A color can be made dull by adding gray, brown, or a drop of the color’s complement. Dulling a color is called a tone of that color

3 Value: the darkness (shade) or lightness (tint) of a color White added to a color to lighten it is called a tint of that color Black added to a color to darken it is called a shade of that color Gray added to a color to dull it is called a tone of that color

4 -Red + white = pink -Red + black = maroon -Red + grey = red/gray Uing only one color with its tints, shades, and tones is a MONOCHROMATIC color scheme black

5 TINT SHADE TONE

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8 When no color is used and only value is shown through light and dark or black and white it is called… Achromatic

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15 Complementary colors: using two colors that are directly opposite each other on the color wheel. Ex: Red and Green Blue and Orange Yellow and Violet

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19 When complementary colors are used side by side they interact and make each other appear brighter and more intense. This is called simultaneous contrast.

20 Many artists use complimentary colors in their work to make their art better, brighter and more saturated.

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24 These colors also exist together in NATURE!

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29 played on

30 Split Complement: using a color and the two colors on either side of the original color’s compliment Ex: The compliment of Red is Green But the split-compliment of Red is Blue-Green and Yellow-Green

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33 Analogous colors: using three or more colors that are in the same color family and are situated next to one another on the color wheel. Ex: Red, Red-Orange, Orange Blue, Blue-Green, Green

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39 Triad: a group of three colors equally distant from each other on the color wheel EX: The three primary colors The three secondary colors Blue-Violet, Red-Orange, Yellow-Green Red-Violet, Yellow-Orange, Blue-Green

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42 Campbell’s Soup Can, Andy Warhol 1962

43 32 Campbell’s Soup Cans, Andy Warhol 1962 Both Warhol and Lichtenstein were part of the POP ART movement– they turned ordinary items into icons of the day

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