Color Theory: Drill 12
- Grahamicus
- Nov 28, 2022
- 2 min read
I read Grit by Angela Duckworth, and it encouraged me to "Zero in on specific weaknesses and drill them relentlessly." I want to gain mastery of color, so I'm zeroing in on color theory and drilling it relentlessly.
In order to do that, I read about the color wheel and making color palettes. Here is simple yet effective advice.
For the first drills, I started with Primary colors (red, yellow, blue) and Secondary colors (green, orange, violet). The "Main" colors.
Now I am doing the Tertiary colors, the colors between the "Main" colors. I am only doing one color at a time, aka a Monochromatic color scheme.
Tertiary colors are more subtle, usually being influenced by the colors around them. Some common examples are Turquoise, a Blue-Green, and Maroon, a dark Red-Violet.

Today I am doing Blue-Violet and using this advice.

Here is my "Most, some, a bit" palette.

Next, I'm doing a challenge from design school. To start we pick four colors, and I have chosen four colors from the palette.

We were assigned to accurately transition from one color to the other, choosing the correct colors by eye. This improves our ability to see subtle differences in color and become better at choosing them. This is my attempt at transitioning between colors.

For comparison to how accurate I was, this is the mathematically "proper" transition done by the computer. Can you spot any differences?

Finally, I want to have some fun, so I'm going to color in a coloring book.



To color this in, I will be applying the palette colors in their "most, some, a bit" amounts. Can you see where each color fits in?

Final notes: On the subject of Thought, Part II. One way to not believe every single thought is to notice their transient nature. Thoughts come and go. Thoughts come and go like clouds in the sky. I enjoy thinking of thoughts coming and going like waves on the beach.
Tune in next time!
-Grahamicus
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