110 likes | 332 Views
Makeup Color Theory. A strong understanding of how color works is vital to effective makeup application. Color Psychology. It is interesting to study how color was discovered and used since our primitive beginnings For example, red was associated with life-giving blood and fire
E N D
Makeup Color Theory A strong understanding of how color works is vital to effective makeup application
Color Psychology • It is interesting to study how color was discovered and used since our primitive beginnings • For example, red was associated with life-giving blood and fire • You can imagine why early people associated black with the darkness of night and yellow with the brightness of day • White is a symbol of purity, while purple is the color worn by persons of royal status
Color Psychology • Different societies have came to attach different significance to colors • It is difficult to name any color that cannot be associated with something that we have experienced as either pleasant or unpleasant • We seem to instinctively like or dislike certain color, but the color specialists say we tend to dislike a color because of some unpleasant incident we may have forgotten
Color Psychology • We do know that people feel happier when surrounded by certain colors • Some color experts say that the colors we use in our homes are definite indications of personality traits • For example, people who surround themselves with cool colors such as green and blue may be expressing their desire for peace and tranquility • People who use an abundance of bright colors such as re, orange and yellow are usually people who love gaiety and who are outgoing
Color Psychology • Can you thing of ways in which you use color to express yourself? • We often hear people describe a mood in color terms • Someone may feel “blue” or “green with envy” • A coward may be described as “yellow” and a bank account may be in the “red”
Skin Color Defined • White skin • Lightest human skin is without color pigmentation • Called albino
Makeup Color Theory • Primary colors • Fundamental colors that cannot be obtained from a mixture • Yellow, red, blue • Secondary colors • Obtained by mixing equal parts of two primary colors • Orange, violet, green • Tertiary colors • Formed by mixing equal amounts of a secondary color and its neighboring primary color • Yellow orange • Yellow green • Red orange • Blue green • Red violet • Blue violet
Complementary Colors • Primary and secondary colors directly opposite each other on the color wheel • When mixed, they cancel each other out to create a neutral brown or gray color
Warm & Cool Colors • Warm colors are vivid in nature. They are bold and energetic. Warm colors are those that tend to advance in space; therefore, caution needs to be taken so you do not overwhelm your content with eye catching hues. If an element in your design needs to pop out, consider using warm colors to do that. • Cool colors are soothing in nature. They give an impression of calm and rarely overpower the main content or message of a design. Cool colors tend to recede; therefore, if some element of your design needs to be in the background, give it cool tones.