Monday, October 12, 2015

Part 3; lesson summary



The three primary colours are commonly associated as red, blue, and yellow. These three colours can be dually combined in order to create secondary colours (like orange, purple, and green), which can then be combined to form tertiary colours (like blue-green, red-orange, etc.). The two different models of colour mixing - additive and subtractive - are differentiated by the fact that additive models involve colours to be added in order to create a new colour, while subtractive models require colours to be taken out. 
One colour affects another through associating complimentary colours. 



  • How can color affect our perception? 
  • How does one color affect another? 
  • Find an example or show an example of a greyscale image. 
  • Find an example or show an example of a monotone image. 
  • Find an example or show an example of an image that uses complimentary color.

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