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Color Nerd
США
Добавлен 7 июн 2021
Let's explore color theory in all its weirdness. Join me as I mix paint, bust myths about primary colors, analyze color schemes, and tickle your brain with color science.
on Wojciech Fangor, Color-Aid, and the legacy of Josef Albers.
Color-aid paper is still a staple of university-level art and design courses after a half century. I've read about it, and its role in Albers-based color theory education, but until now, I've never held it in my hands. (This is not an ad - I paid for the paper set with my own money!)
Special thanks to @virginiawagnergalfo
For the gift and for inspiring this new line of research and creative exploration. Stay tuned to see where my color-aid era takes me!
#colortheory #josefalbers #artanddesign
Special thanks to @virginiawagnergalfo
For the gift and for inspiring this new line of research and creative exploration. Stay tuned to see where my color-aid era takes me!
#colortheory #josefalbers #artanddesign
Просмотров: 1 729
Видео
History forgot this Color Wheel
Просмотров 9 тыс.Месяц назад
Let's talk about a 1931 color wheel, published by Artist and educator elizabeth Hoppin Lewis. Evidently she took classes at Columbia in the 1920s, when Dr. Christine Ladd-Franklin was a science lecturer there. Ladd-Franklin's book on the evolution of color perception came out in 1929, and she died shortly thereafter. But Lewis saw a merit in Ladd-Franklin's ideas and wanted to present them in a...
ONE CRAYON, TWO COLORS? - a demonstration of the Munker-White Illusion
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.Месяц назад
The Munker-White illusion is a well-known, but not well-understood color phenomenon. Here’s my take on what's going on. This color illusion makes a single color appear both deeper and brighter, according to how it's interspersed with black and white stripes. Lateral inhibition, a neural process that helps us emphasize contrasts in our vision, doesn't seem to explain what's happening. Generally,...
Where did the Warm/Cool Thing Come From? (Color Theory History)
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.2 месяца назад
Ever wonder who came up with the whole color temperature thing? Notions of warm and cool colors date to about 1650. Join me for a mini-lecture on art history and color theory! #colortheory #art #arthistory
Fun with filters and equal-value paints.
Просмотров 5802 месяца назад
The paints I used were all selected for having CIELab lightness values of 50 plus or minus 2, after I scanned about 200 swatches with a colorimeter. I was inspired to try this experiment from a couple comments on recent videos. #colortheory #colorscience #painting
An Experiment in Equal-Value Colors
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.3 месяца назад
This painting gave me a chance to explore a number of color theory things. First, based on some of the comments on previous videos in this series on equal-value colored paints, I thought I'd explore the importance of lighting. I attempted to capture the painting's colors under the same type of light used to define the lightness of my paints. In color science, there are a number of specified ill...
Forgotten Color Theorist, Martha Bernstein
Просмотров 5863 месяца назад
In the 1910s-1920s when influential bauhaus color theorists were busy worshipping the outdated theory of Goethe and rejecting new scientific ideas about color... Martha Bernstein was teaching art students the physics and physiology of color. #colortheory #arthistory
The HELMHOLTZ-KOHLRAUSCH EFFECT!
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.4 месяца назад
Using precisely mixed paints from the paint store, I put patches of color on a gray background with the same lightness... but because the colors have different chroma, some appear brighter than others. A huge part of color science is trying to account for all the ways our perception plays tricks on us! #colortheory #artandscience #color
THE BOOK OF COLOUR CONCEPTS (a review)
Просмотров 3,2 тыс.4 месяца назад
Taschen's Book of Colour Concepts, by Alexandra Loske and Sarah Lowengard, is a treasure trove of both important and obscure color theory ideas and diagrams. I’m in awe of the level of scholarship that went into this book. All the usual suspects are here - Newton, Goethe, Chevreul, Itten, Albers. But we also get a wonderful array of lesser-known color theorists, including women and non-Western ...
HOW TO PREDICT PAINT MIXTURE RESULTS!
Просмотров 23 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Unlock the Secret to Vibrant Color Mixing! Discover the hidden structure of the color space and learn how pigment coordinates, opacity, and transparency influence your results. we'll explore the logic of the boundaries and pathways in color space with the goal of revolutionizing your color mixing game. This video features the fascinating and ingenious color wheel developed by the late Merv Mori...
Why You Can't Mix Dark Skin Tones with Youthforia's Shade 600
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Youthforia has included a pure black foundation in its line - straight up ron oxide black, known to artists as mars black. As many people of color and makeup artists have noted, nobody's skin tone is pure black. Others have responded that the product is meant as a mixer to darken other foundations. In this short video I'll explain why the product will not mix natural dark skin tones. #colortheory
CHROMA EXPLAINED
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.7 месяцев назад
A quick explanation of chroma - it's important to understand this dimension of color perception! the term was introduced by Albert H. Munsell in A Color Notation (1905). Chroma measures colorfulness, but is often confused with similar terms like saturation or purity. The main thing to remember is it relates a color to gray: how far is that color from a gray of the same lightness? the answer can...
OKLCH vs. Ostwald color standards - will they match up?
Просмотров 9477 месяцев назад
I was curious to see if vivid colors 45° apart on OKLCH matched the 8 colors at 45° around the Ostwald color circle. what do I mean by 45° apart? If colors are in a circle, a convenient way to describe hue is by angle. a cool red and a middle yellow, for example, are about 90° apart on a circle where hue differences are measured perceptually. complementary colors are 180° apart. Ostwald’s Color...
WHAT HUE IS RAW UMBER? BURNT UMBER? Don't let your eyes be fooled!
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.7 месяцев назад
WHAT HUE IS RAW UMBER? BURNT UMBER? Don't let your eyes be fooled!
Four Ways to Shade Red! Paint Mixing Experiment
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Four Ways to Shade Red! Paint Mixing Experiment
Colors don't run in a circle - they ride a rollercoaster!
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Colors don't run in a circle - they ride a rollercoaster!
The Most Honest Color Wheel I've Seen
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.7 месяцев назад
The Most Honest Color Wheel I've Seen
The opponent process model #colortheory #colorscience
Просмотров 8468 месяцев назад
The opponent process model #colortheory #colorscience
BOB ROSS'S PALETTE HAD SOME QUESTIONABLE CHOICES!
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.Год назад
BOB ROSS'S PALETTE HAD SOME QUESTIONABLE CHOICES!
Understanding RGB Curves in Adobe Premiere - a crash course
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.Год назад
Understanding RGB Curves in Adobe Premiere - a crash course
This is Why Traditional Color Wheels Don't Work! - featuring oil painter Qiang Huang
Просмотров 3 тыс.Год назад
This is Why Traditional Color Wheels Don't Work! - featuring oil painter Qiang Huang
A Deep Dive into Color Theory with Erika Mulvenna
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.Год назад
A Deep Dive into Color Theory with Erika Mulvenna
OPPONENT PROCESS THEORY, COOL PIGMENTS, AND MORE
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.Год назад
OPPONENT PROCESS THEORY, COOL PIGMENTS, AND MORE
COLOR THEORY SLIDE RULE? - how to build and use the Gamu
Просмотров 2 тыс.Год назад
COLOR THEORY SLIDE RULE? - how to build and use the Gamu
IMAGINARY PIGMENTS - what can Mixbox reveal about the structure of color space?
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.Год назад
IMAGINARY PIGMENTS - what can Mixbox reveal about the structure of color space?
HOW TO USE MY SCIENCE-BASED COLOR WHEEL
Просмотров 17 тыс.Год назад
HOW TO USE MY SCIENCE-BASED COLOR WHEEL
Things to Know about Mixing Paint (Replay)
Просмотров 3,5 тыс.Год назад
Things to Know about Mixing Paint (Replay)
EVERYTHING TIKTOK TAUGHT ME ABOUT COLOR THEORY
Просмотров 4,6 тыс.2 года назад
EVERYTHING TIKTOK TAUGHT ME ABOUT COLOR THEORY
ORANGE IS LIGHT BROWN! - the magical discontinued Quinacridone Gold
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.2 года назад
ORANGE IS LIGHT BROWN! - the magical discontinued Quinacridone Gold
Color Nerd, do you know of a good book about color harmonies? I want to understand different color harmonies, why a color harmonizes with another. Is a color wheel always the starting point for a color harmony? Should I know the effect of one color on another color? The effect of shadows on a color in real life.Yellows could become greenish under a shadow?
Omg this is really fascinating, thank you for the free material/stuff its a lot of work
I think there will be at least 3 simultaneous effects: 1. White spreads because it does reflect light while black does the opposite. If you draw a black line on a white paper and then take a strong lamp and point it directly onto the line you can see that the line becomes white or having white fissures along its edges. Usual black can only absorb a certain proportion of light so it gets outshined at some point. (And don't forget there is still a white layer beyond the black. But this is too much quantum stuff...) 2. High contrasts create the illusion of depth. Brains are trained to estimate the depth of a room by its contrasts influenced by light. The color block to the left will be usually interpreted as behind something and the black lines, respectively the object of higher contrast closer to you e.g. when looking outside through a window with a louvre (perspective from the internal system (window) to an external system (environment e.g. sun). The opposite is also true where objects of higher contrast and dimmer color are interpreted as far away e.g. when you are in the same system (dark corners in the room respectively "shadows"). This effect has also an opposite of the opposite and exceptions but this going too far... Looking onto the right side the color block is violating the rule of depth independently from the presence of the left color block. The black lines become interrupted by another color, but progressing with black meaning there must be a gap due to damage etc. This is why it may feel displaced. 3. The bright color illusion? It's similar to the illusion of depth. Brighter colors are interpreted to be closer to you than dark tones. This is also physics and perceived correctly as well because brighter colors usually tend to be closer to the source of energy e.g. the sun. Anything else would be partly absorbed by the atmosphere etc thus looking dimmer. However on the bright and two dimensional sheets of paper e.g. it becomes an illusion. Back to the brighter block on the right side you see black, white, and blue or pink. Its two bright systems and one dark. Each color is brighter than black, so the result will be mostly the same but stronger when using brighter tones, because they inherit or reflect more energy. Because the usual pattern seems to be black lines followed by white space the colored source cannot be perceived as something usual especially when it is replacing the dark tone (black line). It feels displaced and these segments must be closer to you. The white space is increasing this effect. And bright color + bright white must be closer and the color brighter than the black lined contrast. 4. The wrong assumption So illusions are mostly created by wrong assumptions of behaviour experienced in 3 dimensional space. These rules don't be necessarily always true, especially within areas we couldn't usually experience. We have no natural understanding of different wavelengths, especially within the nanoscale these translated to 2 dimensional items. Moreover human perception is also limited. Its more limited than we think it is. Just have a look onto the EM-Spectrum. It may be just 3% of it we can perceive or understand... The brain needs to extrapolate the bright tones away from to the black toned lines to make the most sense respectively some kind of shape of it. Doing so it's deciding to mix the bright colors together to a brighter average colored metastated and shaped block. If you look from far away you will always see a unicolored block instead of randomly colored lines. So the shape is also an extrapolation of the sum of everything.
Whatever these paints do, my screen refused to follow. It just looks like layerd watercolors
Love it. It's almost just a cultural construct of Western artists, though I find myself thinking in these terms too and it would probably be difficult to change.
Thanks for the color aid show. 😊
HSLuv is really useful to painting with CMYK print in mind. Is really easy to see what are the more vibrant color is possible to use. In Rebelle, is really pratical to use with pallete proof.
Fun
I'm colorblind, they're all bad for me :P
I have some experimental color wheel and diagram prototypes for CVD. Don't know if they are worth checking out, but you can find them in the color disk folder linked on my link tree (which is on my channel page)
Have this at the top of my wish list. You've quickly tipped me over the edge. Thank you!
Fascinating! You've put your finger something I've experienced & used in painting and made it crystal clear. Bravo!
Well done!
THX ...
Also a color nerd. Thanks for introducing me to Wojciech Fangor.
I believe it’s because we should be using cyan magenta and yellow as primaries.
What color wheel of device should we be using that is accurate ?
Im so glad RUclips suggested a video of you, this is the right way (nerd way) for my brain to learn deeper about colours
Very interesting as always. Stephen Quiller puts a lot of emphasis in his book "Color Choices" on how to mix his choice of complements to achieve neutral grays. There are tables (for acrylics, oils, watercolors) in the book on which brands color he uses to accomplish this.
this is amazing. what a great tool!
MORE!!!!! Subscribed
How does this interact with redshifting/blueshifting (if at all), and with that hazy blue-ish effect you get at the edge of the horizon sometimes?
🤯 This makes me understand why ancient people so strongly believed in magic.
This is such a cool way to demonstrate the difference between additive and subtractive colour mixing.
This is a fantastic review thank you (especially for keeping it to four minutes of actual content rather than four minutes of content and twelve minutes of filler).
I got all of them 🥹
Wouldn't the molecular structure of the pigments (based on the source of the pigments) have an impact here? After all, RGB wheel deals with light in the mode of energy. Whereas paint is dealing with matter.
Exactly. The problem is RGB wheel is used in everyday life but does not represent the actual paint.
My brain perceived the colors the same until you finished the right side. I actively noticed my perceptions shift from the same color to different colors.
I enjoy every one of your videos. Im not an artist but color theory and color perception overlap alot with science.
This is what Sir Ernst Gombrich called "the Spreading Effect." it's why type in a book looks gray, while it's actually black. The white page seems to "spread" over the black type.
Fascinating!!! 🎉 I may not fully comprehend hoe this works ... nonetheless, FASCINATING!!! 😂
🤯
My personal suspicion is that, just as man has numerous blood types, I believe man (collectively)has numerous numerous color vision processes. I believe our understanding of 'color blindness' is misguided because of this. I say this as a partially 'colorblind' watercolor artist. Let's not forget that the brain can/does form new neuro-pathways when introduced to new awareness (colorblindness) + info (color theory)....this can cause the brain to rescript the way colors are perceived and interpreted.
Fascinating!
I have NO idea why the algorithm threw this my way, but it’s fascinating! Had no idea this color theory existed!
The OTHER missing two angles Point towards Magenta and Teal such as the new color theory TYM !!
Recommended by the Frugal Crafter, who spoke highly of it, I thought I could use the Gamu, but can't find where it is. How do I get hold of it?
My linktree is on my profile. Go there then click "the color disk (and other free stuff)" - it's in there!
Hey! First of all, I am a big fan of your vídeos! I'm a color theory professor at the Design major of the Federal University of Pelotas (Brasil), and I'm willing to replicate this board, but with gouache. It's part of my book of colors, witch is used as a model for my students. Thank you so much for your content!
Cool, thanks for the lesson.
🎉
Interesting! But what do you mean by "pushing against the black"?
I tend to think of simultaneous contrast in terms of pushing - two color perceptions pushing away from each other in a 3D colorspace. In contrast, assimilation causes the colors to "pull" together
@@ColorNerd1 Thank you for the reply! I'm still puzzled as to when colors assimilate vs contrast. Because it's in the perception so it differs by case, no?
The “double primary” color wheel is very close to this. Very interesting.
2:51 Those bastards. 😡
Oddly OK:GO, yes that band sent me here lol. But hey, great video!
Where is your "link tree"?
In his bio on his home page
🦋
My goodness sometime YT throws something at me I didn’t even know I wanted. Subscribed.
Same ☺️
if it aint goethes colour theory it aint worth reading 😎😎😎
Got orange and violet. I'm really surprised by the pink, I expected it to be kind of a grey color because it seemed like a close match to each filters color
Yes white does appear
I learned allot from this video 🥰 Thk you! Very interesting!🙏🏻