Colour Study – Grey

I’m doing a post for Mydeco about grey.  I can’t believe I have been IMMERSED in grey for two weeks.  Who would have thought there would be so much to learn and write about.

Some websites will tell you that grey can have undertones of green, blue or purple.  Others say there are warm and cool greys -

Grays.svg

But I believe that grey could come from ANY colour on the colour wheel, because the various versions of grey are just very unsaturated versions of colours on the colour wheel (review “saturation” here).

I created my own colour wheel to show this. (I think I can do better than this but here it is so far. Click on it to see the colours better.)

Here you can see the warm greys (with red, orange and yellow undertones) and cool greys (with blue, green and violet) undertones.

Here are yellow and violet made more and more grey. Amazing, eh?

I found a bunch of Mydeco grey products and tried to work out what KIND of grey they were. This was HARD.  I must admit I used technology to help me out here (when I simpify the method I will share it with you).

First the cool greys -

Now the warm greys -

Well, what more could there be to say about grey?

Colour grids by Toadfool (me)

Last post I promised colour grids based on each of the twelve colours of my colour wheel

My red-yellow-blue colour wheel

I had such fun doing these.  The saturation increases as you go to the right (dull, muted and saturated), and the value increases as you go down (light, medium and dark).  Aren’t those unsaturated squares gorgeous, but quiet, compared to those show-off saturated squares?

Red saturation and value grid

Red-orange saturation and value grid

Orange saturation and value grid

Yellow-orange saturation and value grid

Yellow saturation and value grid

Yellow-green saturation and value grid

Green saturation and value grid

Blue-green saturation and value grid

Blue saturation and value grid

Blue-violet saturation and value grid

Violet saturation and value grid

Red-violet saturation and value grid

Let me know if you like these or find them useful.

Obsessing about saturation and value

I will be rabbitting on relentlessly about the importance of saturation (dull or saturated) and value (light or dark) as well as colour when designing colour schemes for rooms, quilts, web sites, whatever.  And yet, I STILL have trouble identifying some colours like these -

or imagining what a saturated dark yellow or a dull light red-orange would look like (answers at the end of this post).

I have trawled the interweb for a colour wheel which shows variations in saturation and value for a standard colour wheel.  Despite finding this stunning beauty…

Munsell Chart from WeMakeThemClick.com

…I could not find one that helped me identify colours easily by breaking them down by colour, saturation and value.  I guess representing the three dimensions (colour, saturation and value) on a 2D screen can’t be done.  So I decided I would have to create my own!  I use the words dull, muted and saturated for saturation, and light, medium and dark for value.

Here’s what red-orange looks like -

Red Orange

Here’s one for yellow -

Yellow

So….saturated dark yellow looks like this -

and dull light red-orange looks like this -

and those colours in the beginning -

…are muted medium yellow-green, dull dark yellow and dull medium red-orange.

Wow!  Can’t wait to do the grids for the remaining twelve colours of my colour wheel.

Colour study – saturation and value (blue-green)

Over on MyDeco I blogged about colour theory – the colour wheel, saturation and value – in preparation for doing some interior design schemes.

I just can’t emphasize enough that you should be exercising your “colour muscles” frequently, whatever your artistic endeavour (quilting, interior design, fashion, art).  And here’s a nice way to do it -

1. Choose a colour you love – I chose blue-green.

2. Find photos, web images, fabrics, paint chips, ANYTHING in those colours – making sure you consider variations in saturation and value to get the widest range possible for that colour.  You might need to clip/trim items to keep them purely one colour plus neutrals (but don’t get too hung up about it).

The first pic (of mountains) was taken from my front door.  Pretty lucky, eh?  In fact all the photos are from Brisbane or Cairns, where I have lived for most of my life.  No wonder I love blue-green.

3.  Assemble a gallery of your selections to keep as reference, and add to it periodically.

Stick physical samples into a notebook or on a board.

If using digital resources, an easy way to do this is using Pinterest. You can create an on-line board and “pin” all your pics to it, and even share with other people.  Here’s some of mine. I really must stop spending all my time doing these – I keep coming up with new categories – art, travel, fashion.  Choose something you love.

4. Now – Challenge yourself with a colour you’re not used to or don’t really like.  Choose a new category so that your eyes open to the many sources of inspiration.

I’d love to see what you come up with – post your links below.

Blogging for MyDeco

Soooooooo excited.  I’m blogging for MyDeco (my not-so-secret addiction).

I’ll be using MyDeco to illustrate colour concepts in interior design, and having a lot of fun.

For example, the second post illustrates the concepts of colour, saturation and value using colour wheels and a MyDeco room design.  You can then try to do one of your very own!

illustrate colour, saturation and value

See you over there -

DO YOU HAVE ANY COLOUR PROBLEMS OR QUESTIONS?  Please leave a comment below.