550 likes | 754 Views
Color Psychology and Informational Color. How would you feel if you spent time in this room?. What kinds of associations do you have with the décor and colors of this room?. Color Preferences: Colors individuals gravitate towards.
E N D
How would you feel if you spent time in this room? What kinds of associations do you have with the décor and colors of this room?
Color Preferences: Colors individuals gravitate towards • Based on personality, color bias, color associations, environment, culture, etc.
Factors influencing color preference: • Learned color bias • Variations in the saturation or value of the color • Interactions between studied color and the light source or surrounding color • Contrast between colors in combination or order colors are seen • Size and placement of light sources
Color Psychology: how color may physiologically or emotionally effect us • Attempts have been made to explain how colors affect us psychologically. • Colors will affect specific individuals differently, so it is important not to over-generalize these findings • Additionally, the saturation and value of colors, as well as the situation the color is viewed in, will be as crucial to the effect colors have on us as the actual hue • A hue can seem stimulating or soothing depending on its context and saturation
Greens, blues and violets are thought to be soothing and relaxing
Warm Colors • Are colors associated with fire. • Hues in the ‘red’ section of the color-wheel are considered warm colors– orange, red-violet, yellow are all considered ‘warm’ colors • Warm colors TEND to be stimulating, raising pulse, heart rate, skin temperature, etc. Especially red.
Cool Colors • Are blue-based colors—blue, green, blue-violet • These colors suggest water and trees • They tend to be soothing and relaxing, and reduce heartrate, pulse, etc. • Most Americans claim to prefer blues and green
Studies show that color temperature may be linked to the experience of actual temperature. • Subjects in a red-orange room reported feeling cold once the temperature hit 52 degrees • In a blue-green room they reported feeling cold at 59 degrees
School Interiors: Based on the idea that neutrals are tasteful and non-threatening, and that greens are calming.
But if warm colors are stimulating, maybe we should paint schools like this, waking students’ brains
The Notre Dame Football team painted their locker room this red, to amp up their players. The visiting teams locker room was painted in lighter blues, to calm that team down. Eventually, these kinds of tricks were banned from locker rooms.
Prisoner Pink • A Navy prison painted their walls this hue of pink and found that it calmed their prisoners and led to less hostility. The theory was that this color emasculated the prisoners, making them easier to control. • However, this only lasted a few weeks, as the prisoners readjusted to the wall colors, hostility returned.
Color and Food Color is directly connected to our perception and enjoyment of food.
Blue is a color not often seen in nature and thus unnatural as a food coloring. People are less likely to want to eat a food that looks ‘wrong’. This is an evolutionary remnant, when eating off-colored food could lead to food poisoning or death. A blue light, or blue tint near food often makes food seem ‘off’, and reduces our desire for it.
Kids will eat it. They have fewer color/food associations and are less likely to see wrong-colored food as potential poison
Test subjects who were given exaggeratedly colored food (extra-orange orange juice) reported that the juice tasted sweeter than identical juice with no coloring added. Subjects given lime juice colored orange couldn’t recognize the taste difference and claimed to be drinking orange juice.
Pink is thought to increase the sensation of sweetness, which is why many baked goods are sold in pink boxes.
Warm colors( red, yellow, orange, etc) are more stimulating and often used in fast-food restaurants because they encourage customers, to get in, eat and leave quickly, allowing for more turn around.
Cultural Color Preferences • People from warmer climates tend to prefer brighter, more saturated colors while individuals from colder, northern climates prefer cooler, less saturated colors • It is theorized that in brighter environments, people’s eyes adapt to protect them from the bright light, so there is a physiological bias towards brighter colors-they resemble the natural surroundings. • In Northern climates, people are used to less brightness, so bolder colors are more jarring, and de-saturated colors more appealing.
Learned Color Bias: Associations we pick up from observations of the world • we know red means stop whether we look at a stop sign in English or Arabic • Similarly, for Americans, green means GO, but this is not the case in other parts of the world
In contemporary culture, we associate pink with a girl’s color and blue for boys. In the Victorian era, pink was a boy’s color (because it was a lessened version of masculine red) and blue a girl’s color. • Blue was associated with the Virgin Mary through art. Before many chemical dyes and pigments, true blue was ground from lapiz lazuli gems, making blue pigments in paintings extremely rare and preserved for the most important characters. • Because of it’s common use to depict the Virgin, it became associated with her traits of piety, truth, and goodness.
Cultural Color Associations • The following is a list of some common associations with colors. • These are LEARNED color associations, meaning we pick up the meaning of these colors from how they are used in the world, they are not inherent meanings to the colors • In fact, many potential associations for an individual color may directly contradict each other
Red: Fire, Blood, Passion and emotion, love, courage (Red Badge of Courage), Lust, crime, murder, rage, Temper (red hair) “Seeing Red” Red-Letter Days, Caught red-handed, Scarlet Women, Scarlet Letter, Red Light District, STOP! Red is a warning color, it immediately gets our attention, whether on a stop sign, or a ripe apple in a tree, we are conditioned to notice red when it exists. Darker reds are associated with elegance and sophistication RED
Adding white completely changes our read of red, more than any other color, light red is seen as a distinct color on it’s own (pink) associated with little girls, gentility, the feminine, sweetness.
PURPLE Luxurious, Royal, Originally purple pigment was created from mollusks. It’s rarity meant it was limited to royalty and wealthy individuals and that association has lingered. Dusty purples are associated with nostalgia or age. In design, purple is often associated with luxury items. Purple Heart—Bravery, awarded to soldiers wounded in combat. It can be associated with mysticism. In nature, purple rarely exists (perhaps adding to it’s luxury associations), most often it shows up as a flower.
Cheery, sunshine, happiness. In flower design, yellow denotes friendship. Generally, the ‘least favorite’ color chosen. High reflexivity; one of the first colors to be noticed, and one of the first colors babies are able to perceive. Food associations: with citrus, butter, and cheeses, Indian food & spices. Regarded as a special color in some Asian cultures: Buddhist monks wore yellow robes because yellow was associated with the afterlife. Negative associations: Yellow Press, Jaundice, Yellow: coward, old, yellowed paper, Warning color seen in: Snakes, Wasps, Radiation symbols, Yellow+black is instantly eye-catching (a learned color response) Yellow
Fire, warmth, heat, spice (cinnamon, turmeric, curry); cheer; autumn; leave change; harvest color; sunsets Brown oranges suggest comfort and security-homey colors In some cultures, orange suggests fertility, because orange trees are so prolific High-Visibility: Florescent orange vests, life rafts, orange jumpsuits
Browns: natural, earth, wood, Strength, hard work, no-nonsense, unadorned (Puritans) Age, nostalgia, sepia-toned photos, Rich, dark browns can evoke, chocolate, luxury, wealth, taste, Other browns can evoke simplicity, hardiness, Negative associations:Brown-noser, dirt, unclean, brown undertones in colors can make them either less appealing or earthier (depends on the brown).
In design, blue often connotes dependability, classic choices, strength, tranquility, balance, transcendence, motherhood, ‘cool’, serenity Combined with red, patriotism Negative associations: sadness, depression, coldness Associations:True-Blue, sky, water, infinity, serenity, First place blue ribbon, Blue chip (the best), Blue Blood (royality, nobility), Blue Collar (working class), The Blues, balance, transcendence, Blue jeans, cursing a blue streak, blue prose, dependability, Little boy blue, America’s favorite color!
Spring, growth, rejuvenation, ‘going green’, green thumb, camouflage, nature, grass, fertility, freshness, rebirth, luck, heaven (Muslim faith) Negative associations: sickness, envy, jealousy, decay, poison, nausea, mold (food, especially baked goods, are rarely packaged in green for this association) Pop-culture: environmentalism, aliens (little green men) Calming and relaxing, thus often used in hospitals, hotels, and schools.
Victorian dress dyed with arsenic dye, and image from a Victorian medical book detailing arsenic burns on a garment maker’s hands.
NEUTRALS: unspecific, ‘staying neutral’, unimposing, eggshell, natural hues, beige, neutrality, earthiness, sand, Negative associations: bland, boring
Maximum lightness (all light is reflected), white magic, white lies, white flag-truce, white elephant (unwanted object), White House, Associations: coolness, cleanliness, sanitation, hygiene, purity, innocence (wedding dresses) Americans prefer blue or green-cast whites, Mediterraneans prefer yellow or red-cast whites. White walls, white sands, white cube, impersonal, In India, it is a color for funeral, associated with death
Word associations:blacklist, blackmail, blackball, black market, black sheep, black widow, black tie, black cat (bad luck), In India, a wedding color Combined with red or yellow: a warning color (see snakes, spiders, poison butterflies, radioactive symbols) Positive associations: Elegance, sophistication, refinement Negative associations: Darkness, death, threat, shadows, fear
What does this color combination suggest/why would a designer choose these colors?
What does the red mean in this image, when combined with a pen, in an ad promoting a playwright? ChazMaviyane-Davis