This document discusses different color schemes including monochromatic, analogous, complementary, triadic, and split complementary. Monochromatic uses tones of one hue, analogous uses adjacent hues, complementary uses opposite hues, triadic uses three equally spaced hues, and split complementary is similar to complementary but uses colors on both sides of the opposite hue.
This document discusses different color schemes including monochromatic, analogous, complementary, triadic, and split complementary. Monochromatic uses tones of one hue, analogous uses adjacent hues, complementary uses opposite hues, triadic uses three equally spaced hues, and split complementary is similar to complementary but uses colors on both sides of the opposite hue.
This document discusses different color schemes including monochromatic, analogous, complementary, triadic, and split complementary. Monochromatic uses tones of one hue, analogous uses adjacent hues, complementary uses opposite hues, triadic uses three equally spaced hues, and split complementary is similar to complementary but uses colors on both sides of the opposite hue.
Color Schemes Color Schemes Monochromatic Color Schemes
Monochromatic color schemes are
easy to create because they use only one color. Monochromatic schemes use different tones from the same angle on the color wheel (the same hue). Analogous Color Schemes Analogous color schemes are also easy to create. Analogous color schemes are created by using colors that are next to each other on the color wheel. Color Schemes Complementary Color Schemes
Complementary schemes are created by
combining colors from opposite sides of the color wheel. Triadic Triadic schemes are made up of hues equally spaced around color wheel. Split Complementary Color Scheme
Compound schemes are almost the same as complementary schemes.
Instead of using colors that are opposites, it uses colors on both sides of the opposite hue . Color Schemes Color Schemes Color Schemes Color Schemes