Using Color Effectively

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    How to Use Color Effectively in Your Designs

    In these striking examp les, you'll see how color affect s the moo d of a piece, and how it interacts with other elements of the designs.

    Written by Lauren Krause on November 23, 2 009

    Categories:Graphics, Print, Print Design & Layout, Web Design & Layout, Features

    Color can strongly influence the mood of a design. You probably know that, but have you ever

    wondered how one color can have two or more meanings?

    Red, for example, can mean love but it can also represent aggression, danger, or violence. With all of

    those feelings associated with the color red, how do you know when it says which and what will be the

    connotation of red in yourdesign?

    That's where you have to take all the other elements of design into account. Pay attention to the color's

    value, or saturation. And are elements such as line, texture, or shape pointing to certain moods or

    feelings that the design is suppose to elicit?

    Other important influences on the mood a color evokes are the quantity and placement of that color in

    the design, as well as other dominant colors in the composition. Color theory (complementary colors,

    triads, etc.) plays a big role and can guide you to appropriate combinations. You can also look to

    historical uses of colors and combinations.

    The Influence of Value

    Value is not color, nor is it contrast. Value is tone and has to do with light and dark. The visual

    spectrum of value ranges from black to white. It can dramatically alter the mood of a design depending on the amount of contrast

    present.

    A great example of the influence value has on color is to compare red and pink. These two colors come from the same hue, butthey give two completely different connotations because of pink's tint (addition of white). Red is a much more grown-up color

    than pink. Red has mature feelings associated with it (love, rage), where pink tends to conjure images of Barbie or cupcakes.

    Yet even within the color red, there's a wide range of emotions. How are you to tell if your piece will project passion or danger?

    The example below from Taryn Rose has the caption "Comfortably Sexy." Its deep, rich shades of red make this a very

    passionate ad. The hue of red also leans more towards a blue-red than an orange-red. This is an important distinction.

    How to Use Color Effectively in Your Designs | CreativePro.com

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    Contrast the Taryn Rose ad with this next piece from ConAgra Foods. Sure, the caption says "Office Romance," but does that red

    say romantic to you? It probably doesn't because it's an orange-red. Orange and red are both warm colors and give this particular

    hue a more cheerful mood than a steamy, sexy mood like the Taryn Rose red. And it's supposed to; this ConAgra ad is much more

    playful and light-hearted than the Taryn Rose one.

    Yellow is a youthful, warm, sunny, cheerful color that can also symbolize danger, attention, and caution. The Denver Center

    Theater used a shade of yellow in its poster for A Raisin in the Sun, below. Adding black to yellow can be tricky -- it can quickly

    turn to a mushy, unpleasant brown. This yellow is the perfect shade for the mood of the play because it's neither overly sunny norcheerful, but on the whole, it's still optimistic.

    How to Use Color Effectively in Your Designs | CreativePro.com

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    The most obvious use of yellow for danger or caution is the notorious CAUTION tape, which can also come in a POLICE LINE --

    DO NOT CROSS edition. Though it may be an overused design element, it works. It elicits the message it's supposed to. Darwin

    plastered its annual report cover with caution tape to tell the audience that the company is conservative and careful. Yellow might

    not be the first choice for that mood, but it's successful in combination with the tape motif. Notice that "caution" yellow is pure,

    bright, and bold. This is yellow in its truest form.

    How to Use Color Effectively in Your Designs | CreativePro.com

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    The Truvia green feels natural, refreshing, and delicious. It uses a combination of a fairly pure hue of green and tints (adding white

    to hue) to give it a dynamic yet unified mood. This green is slightly inclined towards a yellow-green, too, and that makes it feel like

    a fresh, new green.

    The Milliemelisse branding is a great example of how adding a tint of green can turn a mood from new/inexperienced to fresh and

    slightly upscale. Children are new and inexperienced and using a purer hue of green like the Truvia green would have convey thewrong message to the audience. Instead, the designers from Paper Stone Scissors used a less vibrant green; the result is a design

    that feels child-oriented without negative connotations. This green also leans more towards blue/aqua instead of yellow, and that

    also steers us away from a "newer" feeling green.

    The Influence of Other Colors

    Red and blue by themselves are almost opposite in their meanings. Red, as I've noted, can create a mood of passion, love, rage, or

    danger. Blue can be stable, calm, trustworthy, or depressing. Combine them and you conjure the mood of two opposing teams. But

    add white and the mix goes from opposites to something that's unified and (depending on where you're from) patriotic.

    How to Use Color Effectively in Your Designs | CreativePro.com

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    Again, red by itself may evoke love, anger, or danger, but partner it with the right shade of green and you can't help but be

    reminded of Christmas.

    How to Use Color Effectively in Your Designs | CreativePro.com

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    Quick! What came to your mind when you saw the ad above? What was your first thought? McDonald's? The Golden Arches have

    such a firm grasp on red with yellow accents that it's difficult to pull an audience's initial reaction to this combination away from

    the McDonald's connotation.

    The Influence of Subject Matter

    Sometimes designers and artists like to juxtapose subject matter and other elements in the composition, like color.

    There has been a growing trend towards associating pink, especially neon pink, with punk rock. Since Barbie has long beenidentified with a bright pink, it's interesting to note that examples like this poster don't remind us at all of the blonde doll.

    How to Use Color Effectively in Your Designs | CreativePro.com

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    It's also possible to use a color in a way that's against its traditional meaning. This Kinesio ad does that quite effectively. It's as if

    by using pink it's saying it fully wants to be associated with the female athlete, but let's turn the idea of "female athlete" on its

    head.

    You know that color is critical in determining the mood of a design, and now you understand how color interacts with so many

    other variables to nail down that mood. Using tints and shades of a color play a role in the projected mood every bit as much as the

    hue itself. In your next project, be aware of how color combinations and other elements of design like line, shape, and texture can

    influence the atmosphere, too.

    How to Use Color Effectively in Your Designs | CreativePro.com