Posts tagged Color Theory
Posts tagged Color Theory
OK SO i get asked about colors a lot and i’m really sorry i am so lame at giving detailed answers SO I’M GONNA ATTEMPT TO FORMULATE SOME„, BASIC TIPS I GUESS
LET ME JUST START OUT BY SAYING i’m not really a very skilled or fancy or formally educated artist (shocking i know) and i don’t take drawing very seriously, BUT I HOPE A FEW THINGS I HAVE SAY WILL HELP YOU(extra commentary in case anything is hard to read, here is the whole thing in one pic and not an obnoxious photoset)
1. HAVE FUN WHEN YOU ARE COLORING JEEZ don’t loose hair over trying really hard to study and adsorb shading and lighting ‘ruuuules’!! and while enough basic understanding is obviously important and necessary in creating believable and realistic pieces, being creative is also really important as well!! the bottom line of art is that there ARE no rules, and if you really do want to be happy with your work, i find a lot of satisfaction arises in knowing i made something only /I/ could make!! and besides, if i didn’t have fun making art, then i wouldn’t do it, frankly
2. PAY ATTENTION TO WHAT TONE YOUR COLORS PORTRAY this is especially true for people and expressions and setting
since color is such a big part of a piece, it also plays a big role in setting the tone of your work!! take a minute to evaluate the context of whatever you’re drawing and then try to see what colors would best parrallel that! and especially don’t be afraid to venture into palettes you don’t normally use!! but once you choose a palette that matches the tone of your work BE SURE TO STICK WITH IT so it is contiguous in both the background and foreground
(i used twilight princess and skyward sword as an example, i hope my analysis makes sense)
3. be sure to scribble with and test how colors look together BEFORE you take them to your lines!! and finally HAVE FUN WITH YOUR COLORING i know i already said this but it’s simply tragic when an artist becomes bored/uninterested/frustrated with colors ahhh!!! remember that every artist has different coloring styles so try you best to observe others’ techniques!! pay attention to what you like about them, but ALSO pay attention to what you dislike!!
practice a lot of styles, and ask around which programs/brush settings artists use if you find yourself interested in them!! i’m sorry i can’t help you with more technicalities, but learning for yourself is also half the fun!! plus i’m a lazy motherfucker and i’m bad a tutorials anyway
OKKKKAAY THANKS FOR READING OLLIE OUT
And I still suck at color. C’est l….etc.
LMAO OKAY OKAY SO.
AFTER MUCH DELIBERATION WITH MYSELF (what to include, what not) i’ve finally figured out what to put on my colour tutorial! LSKDJSKLDGJ. i’ve split two parts with multiple subparts! the first part will cover a bunch of rules that you’d PROBS find in a OTHER TUTORIALS/artbooks and are THEREFORE pretty important! i’ll call these the *~*CAE…SICS~*~* b/c they are basics which i (CAE) think are NECESSARY to understand the reasoning in the second part of this tutorial (which will be how i personally stylize/apply/bend/break???? these rules)!
i’ll call this second part APPLI…CAE..TIONS.
applicaetions are way heavier on actual colour coordination/palette making (AND I MAKE UP MY OWN TERMS OOOO), as opposed to CAESICS which are AGAIN more based on universal terminology. CAESICS can totally be skipped if you know what I mean by… “hue/saturation/luminosity” and “colour relativity (AKA warmer blue/cooler red).”
DSFKLDJF DISCLAIMER: I AM BY NO MEANS AN EXPERT AT THIS GAME. and really, the only kind of training i have is…
lots and lots and lots of practice???COUGHS MOVING ONA. part one: CAESICS
- - hue/saturation/luminosity
- - colour mixing
- - colour wheel (kinda)
- - colour warmth/colour coolness
- - color relativity
B part two: APPLICAETIONS
- - colour “weight”
- - general palette tips
- - palette breakdown
- - shading with colour!
- - last thoughts.
(via art-resources)
If you’re interested in color theory, or you like beautifully-designed little games, or you just feel like being bad at something today (OH MY GOD SLOW DOWN TOO MANY COLORS), try this.
(via Metafilter)
3.6.
Fuck.
4.5
[ 6.2 ??? Falsmflak DANG ]
8.0
would’ve been higher but i accidentally clicked before i was done once. i guess being used to corel painter is good practice?
9.7
…wait what?
most trouble i had was running out of time…
6.5 - Quaternary made lose my mind. haha.
(via snarkylittleshark)
Taken from PK’s color tutorial:
1) Keep light sources in mind, keep them consistent.
2) If two colors clash, they may need a third color in the group,or you may need to tweak one of the two colors.
3) Try to keep the temperature of the palette consistent (either definitely cool or definitely warm)
4) Don’t shade with black until you understand color relations better.
5) Vary values and saturation level so that they may emphasize the most important part of the picture.
6) Don’t be afraid to experiment and make mistakes!
ImagineFX workshop on color theory by Philip Straub
(via gatheringnewartswag)
(via art-resources)
Ok following on from that Artist Problems reblog, what helped me was these articles by James Gurney:
Color Wheel Masking, Part 1
The Shapes of Color Schemes
From Mask to Palette
3D Gamut AnimationsWorth a look if you’re having trouble drawing a connection between theory and application. I’d never seen the information set out in this way before and it made it so much simpler for me.
Color Theory Crash Course by *pronouncedyou