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  • You wake up in the morning, you look in the mirror and you decide how you look or how you

  • feel mostly dependent upon color. Color can effect you both physiologically and

  • psychologically. You can make somebody feel something with color. Piss them off. Yeah. Color is

  • everywhere. It's just pervasive all throughout our lifestyles, our culture. Whether or not

  • you're verbalizing it, you're actually saying something to the world: "This is me

  • because I'm wearing this color."

  • Most people know color.

  • You know color, you use it every day. You interact with it. That's how you make your way

  • through the world and the color perceptors in your eyes are rods and cones.

  • Cones start with a "C" and they perceive color, your rods perceive

  • grays. Color theory, as a definition, it's more the mixtures and implementation of

  • combinations of color.

  • Color is the umbrella under which hue, value, and chroma rest. Hue being the

  • distinction between different colors on a wheel from red to red orange, so to speak.

  • Value being light and dark and chroma being bright and dull. The color wheel is a

  • tool that helps us talk about the physical phenomena of light and how we

  • perceive it and how we ultimately implement it in designs and the combinations.

  • We now teach more based on the harmonies and contrasts and how it relates to how

  • you utilize color. So students learn about complimentary colors which tend to be

  • opposite one another and clash which is just two colors but they're one-off of

  • complimentary. I think that there's been many different types of wheels and so I

  • say to students nowadays, I don't mind if you invent your own wheels with

  • your own nuanced understandings of color because you're a different human than

  • whoever came before you and who knows what you'll come up with invents the future

  • that we haven't even seen yet.

  • So, you get a lot more interaction with color nowadays on multiple levels and

  • people are aware of this. They know that they're affected by it soulfully and not just

  • mentally. And you should take that strength in your soul to build your own

  • understanding because it is so personal and you change.

  • Color, for me, is what I call sort of a silent language or an emotional language

  • that we all sort of intuitively know how to speak. As we see color we start to

  • associate it with different things in our lives. We have three different types

  • of associations: universal,

  • cultural, and individual.

  • Individual color preference is a really interesting dynamic. I think color

  • trends play a part in color preference. Quite often though, it may be associated with an

  • experience.

  • There are definitely universal aspects to color and they are usually the

  • physiological ones. So red is definitely the one that increases your heart rate when

  • you first see it. It makes you want to move. There's some studies that actually say

  • that you'll walk faster, you'll eat more, you'll talk more when you're, let's say,

  • in a red room than any other color. One great example is you think of the red carpet.

  • Well, there's a reason why the red carpet is the red carpet and that's because it keeps the

  • traffic flowing.

  • Where, conversely, when you see blue the opposite will happen. So you become

  • more calm and relaxed.

  • I think the one that is most interesting is the cultural differences.

  • For the most part it's usually a learned response. So when you're very young you

  • might think of brown as dirty and earthy but, as time goes on, you learn to

  • adjust those associations. So, all of a sudden, when espresso and coffee became a whole

  • new trend, brown took on a whole new association. When we start to think of

  • things like recycling or environmental concerns it's natural for us to

  • think of green. So we develop different types of associations that we share

  • with other human beings and, as we grow, those become more and more meaningful to us.

  • I've gone back through the twentieth century and and I found that there were some

  • ebbs and flows of color and it's just an evolution of a shit not a revolution.

  • Color is not the place where I look

  • first. It's the why behind it; the economic, the social, the political, the

  • technological, environmental influences. They're all the drivers of

  • why color is always evolving and revolving.

  • With the economic issues that we've had in recent years, people gravitate to safe colors,

  • grounded colors rooted in the past and rooted into the ground.

  • So you bring up, what we call, organic colors and as we get familiar with

  • that, there comes a time when we need a pick me up. So take the familiar and just add a

  • little accent of something new and give you a totally new look. Here we were

  • with the depression. People were so depressed they needed to put color back in their

  • lives so they colored glass and that's where depression glass comes from. Go back to the

  • Sixties and we saw the psychedelic colors coming in because of the drug

  • culture. Just pattern on pattern, color on color and it was just a kaleidoscope of

  • everything happening all at once. And in the Seventies we had rest for a decade.

  • We browned out and,

  • remember the decoupage and almond and beige and browns of the

  • nineteen-seventies. So, in forecasting, we look at those kinds of trends, what are

  • constant, but also something new and different for the forecast in the future.

  • As like a gif

  • artist you can only use two hundred and fifty six colors. I think the restriction is really

  • cool. It's like something common that all gif makers have to think about when they're making a gif.

  • You work within this resolution

  • that, in today's high-def,

  • you never see so it almost gave it an aesthetic just because it was so

  • constrained. It's minimalism.

  • It lets the viewer fill in the blanks.

  • It's communicating with people via imagery. We like to experiment with

  • different types of film. That's why you never see the

  • same looking portrait

  • shot. You get like different colors that you wouldn't get with your perfect camera.

  • Like a VHS camera brings out the oranges and

  • makes everything super-saturated. You almost can't fake that kind of color because

  • of the way the colors interact with each other.

  • You can always make a rainbow move

  • because there's so many colors to cycle through.

  • You don't even have to be choosy on the colors as long as

  • you have all of them in there. I'm like a black and white fiend. You know, like, the

  • conscious decision of not using color and

  • making it work. Black and white is bold. But then you throw in, like, a little red.

  • It'll make that red pop just that much more. Variety, you know, like if you

  • see our page. If it was all color or all black and white, it wouldn't

  • have much impact.

  • When it comes to colors, though, you want to think of like what colors match before you even

  • worry about what colors you can't use.

  • And like you can make anything as long as you make it look intentional.

  • It's like a taste of nostalgia.

  • It's also like the challenge of trying to convey an idea in these blocks.

  • Usually people think picking the color for something is pretty simple but it

  • actually gets complex pretty quickly.

  • Color's emotive and I don't think it ever stays static and so you're

  • looking at color in a different way of accenting it rather than changing it abruptly.

  • It's just that you have to learn to identify it and codify the language: how do I arrange them

  • and how do I speak about that arrangement so that other people understand what I'm creating or doing.

  • Use black and white sometimes.

  • Colors are just fun, man. I just want to, like,

  • inspire people to make fun stuff.

You wake up in the morning, you look in the mirror and you decide how you look or how you

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色彩的影響|脫書|PBS數字工作室 (The Effect of Color | Off Book | PBS Digital Studios)

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    Chia-Yin Huang 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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