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Elements and Principles of Art and Design Element: Color Hue: Technical Term for Color Pigment: Physical Material of Color. Painting Materials Paint palette Acrylic Paint Paint brushes Cup of water Paper Towel Sketchbook / Paper. Paint Pump Tips
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Elements and Principles of Art and Design Element: Color Hue: Technical Term for Color Pigment: Physical Material of Color
Painting Materials • Paint palette • Acrylic Paint • Paint brushes • Cup of water • Paper Towel • Sketchbook / Paper
Paint Pump Tips Only take a dime-size amount of paint (you can always go back for more) If paint does not come out of the pump easily, STOP. Get a paper towel and cover the opening of the spout and push the pump. If paint does not come out, find a pair of scissors or a sharp/narrow object. Use the object to clear any dried paint from the spout. Try to push again.
Painting Tips Add dark colors to light colors (never light to dark) Only mix as much as you need: be conservative and do not waste paint Wash your brush and pat dry with paper towel for each different color
Cleaning Your Brush Rinse brush thoroughly and carefully under warm water. Massage bristles to work out any paint left. Squeeze the bristles. If the water comes out clear, the brush is clean.
Order of Paint on Palette 1. Cool Red 2. Warm Red 3. Warm Yellow 4. Cool Yellow 5. Cool Blue 6. Warm Blue Only a dime-size glob of paint at a time!
Primary Colors Red, Yellow, Blue Can create any color when mixed, along with black and white Cannot be created from mixing other colors
Secondary Colors Orange, Green, Violet Creating by mixing 2 primary colors together
Tertiary Colors Red-Orange, Yellow-Orange, Yellow-Green Blue-Green, Blue-Violet, Red-Violet Creating by mixing 1 primary color and 1 adjacent secondary color together
Color Temperature Warm Colors (Fire, Sun, Heat): Cool Colors (Ice, Cold, Night):
Opaque vs. Transparent Transparent: Can see through it To Increase Transparency: Add Water Opaque: Cannot see through it To Increase Opacity: - Add more pigment, less water - Add more layers of paint
Value (in color): The lightness or darkness of a hue Tinting: Adding white to make a hue lighter Shading: Adding black to make a hue darker Toning: Adding gray to desaturate a color (Be careful: this dulls & flattens color)
Color Scheme An arrangement or combination of colors used in a work of art Monochromatic Analogous Complementary
Monochromatic Color Scheme All the values (tints, tones, and shades) of one particular hue Creates balance, unity, and harmony
Analogous Color Scheme Three or four hues (MAX 5) that are adjacent on the color wheel (includes tertiaries) Creates balance, unity, and harmony, with some variety and contrast
Complementary Color Scheme Two hues that are opposite each other on the color wheel When placed next to each other: They create energy and contrast, make each other *POP*
Complementary Colors When mixed together: They desaturate each other, create a brown or gray
Saturation vs. Desaturation Saturation: The vibrancy, purity, and intensity of a hue *A highly saturated color is vibrant, pure, intense Desaturate: Decrease the saturation of a hue to create a duller, more brown-gray hue