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Color Theory

Across
Contain equal parts of each of the three primary colors. Brown, White, and Gray are considered “neutral”.
Colors that appear opposite each other on the color wheel. Red – Green, Blue – Orange, Yellow – Purple.
Light waves absorbed or reflected by everything around us. In nature, a rainbow is white light that is broken apart by the moisture in the air. The colors of the visible light spectrum are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.
Colors that cannot be made, which are red, yellow, and blue.
The quality of color, intensity of color, or brightness of color.
Two colors on either side of the complement, i.e. Split-complement of yellow is blue-violet and red-violet.
Using any colors that are 90 degrees on the color wheel and those that are in between. Three or four colors that are adjacent or next to each other on the color wheel. Analogous colors are ‘similar’ in that they all share one primary color in their composition or make up.
Is another name for color.
Means that it is mostly see through.
Means you can’t see through it.
Reds, yellows, and oranges.
Down
2 primary colors mixed together. Yellow + Blue = Green, Yellow + Red = Orange, Blue + Red = Purple.
Color scheme that is equal distance on the color wheel.
Tints and shades of 1 color.
Blues, Greens, and purples.
The strength or sharpness of color.
A relative degree of light and dark.
A primary and a secondary color mixed together. Yellow + Orange = Yellow Orange, Yellow + Green = Yellow Green, Blue + Purple = Blue Purple, Blue + Green = Blue Green, Red + Purple = Red Purple, Red + Orange = Red Orange.
Dark values of a color.
A dry insoluble substance, powder, which when suspended in a liquid vehicle becomes a paint form plants, animals, and minerals.
Gradation using shades and tints.
Light values of a color.