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Honored Contributor
Posts: 37,649
Registered: ‎03-20-2010

Re: Warm vs cool colors

[ Edited ]

@Abrowneyegirl 

 

Look at a color wheel for good combinations

 

Image result for coordinating colors with a decorator color wheel

 

Image result for coordinating colors with a decorator color wheel

 

 

 

Color Schemes

There are some tried and true color schemes already at your disposal. The are Complementary, Triadic, Analogous, Split-Complementary, Tetradic, and Square schemes. They are formed using by creating different zones on the wheel. These schemes are used over and over in various ways and are guaranteed to work together.

 

Complementary

Complementary colors are directly across from one another on the color wheel. They are opposites. They compete for attention, yet also emphasize the other. The basic ones are Red and Green, Blue and Orange, Yellow and Violet. I’ll include Black and White because they are opposites and considered complementary even though they are technically not colors. Fun fact: mixing two complementary colors together will get you a murky brown!

 

Triadic

Triadic schemes use three colors that are evenly spaced around the wheel. They can be your primaries (RYB), your secondaries (OGV) or a mix of the tertiaries, as long as they are evenly spaced out from one another on the wheel. It’s probably good to point out that trios tend to be the most visually appealing number in a grouping so triadic schemes fit the bill great. Trios create a great sense of balance. Or pick one hue to be the main focus and use the other two as accents to shake things up a bit.

 

Analogous

Looking for a calming atmosphere? This is probably the one for you. Analogous schemes use the same hue but in varying values. If your favorite color is blue, then you could use navy, teal, and aquamarine together as your analogous scheme. Since the underlying hue is the same, the overall look comes across as relaxing.

 

Split Complementary

Do you love red but are not so keen on a Christmas scheme? You can split it up! This scheme involves grabbing the two neighboring colors from a complementary color instead of the exact complement. So red would be complemented with blue-green and yellow-green instead. This way you get the strong contrast, but no holiday theme.

 

Tetradic

Can’t narrow it down to three? Four colors work for tetradic scheme! You are creating a rectangle on the wheel. This is essentially using two complementary color schemes in the same space and making it work. That’s why this scheme is also called a double complementary. The secret to making this style work is to pick one color to stand out and use the other three as supporting colors. Pay attention to the balance between warm and cool hues too. The use of a good neutral tone will also keep this scheme from giving you a color overload.

 

Square

Similar idea to the tetradic, except instead of a rectangle you are creating a square on the wheel. These four colors are evenly spaced out around the wheel to create the ultimate balanced scheme. Each warm color is balanced by its opposite cool color. It’s often best to used tints or shades of your hue choices to create a more harmonious scheme instead of a competition for attention.

 

 

Animals are reliable, full of love, true in their affections, grateful. Difficult standards for people to live up to.”
Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,162
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

The colorwheel is beautiful to me. I agree, some colors flow together better than others. Favorite combo is blue and green. Something new -- I'm beginning to wear true purple with any color and it works. At least I think it works. 

 

I have icy, blue-gray eyes (thank you, dad) but my childhood hair color is medium brown with red highlights when the sun shines on it. Getting highlights in my hair was always confusing to me. Cool or warm? 

"I took a walk in the woods and came out taller than the trees." Henry David Thoreau
Honored Contributor
Posts: 68,678
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: Warm vs cool colors

[ Edited ]

From the get go, I don't think of most shades of 'green' as warm colors... Some of the yellow-greens, yes, otherwise, I see green as a cooler, peaceful and restful color... As for mixing them, I think a deft hand can mix cool and warm and make something spectacular... To me, the best rooms combine elements of warm and cool, though I'd not always say the same for outfits we might wear... With clothing, it's so immediately close to our persons that what works best depends on our coloring...


In my pantry with my cupcakes...
Honored Contributor
Posts: 8,207
Registered: ‎10-03-2014

I'd recommend finding out what colors flatter him most.  Reference the book "Color Me Pretty."  It applies to men, too.

 

True blues and greens, cool jewel tones, for example, look best on those with Winter coloring.  Greens and blues look great in plaids and prints as long as they are one of the following:  Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer. 

 

I'd stay away from a solid cool tone blue shirt with warm tone green pants.  An exception, I think is light khaki, a warm color many men like to wear. I can't think of a color that doesn't go well with light khaki...maybe gray.  

 

Some will disagree, but I agree with you @Abrowneyegirl.

 

You'll find many more men with varying degrees of colorblindness than women, so they won't see colors the same way.  They might not even know they have problems with colors.  To find out, you might try putting out different colors and ask what colors he sees. 

 

He might not even know the difference between warm and cool colors.  You could give him the Color Me Pretty test to see what colors he looks best.  If willing, he could read the book.  He'd be more inclined to choose his best colors if you tell him how good he looks in them.  Tell him it makes him look younger.  I think the right colors do.  

 

Then, I suggest giving away those other colors if he approves, of course, but he might not care about colors at all.  

 

You could help him with colors by pulling out those that go together whenever he goes somewhere.  My mother does this with my father who is a bit colorblind.  He's gotten to the point he asks her to do it.  

 

 

 

 

 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 24,685
Registered: ‎07-21-2011

I say go with what pleases you and looks good together.  I believe the warm and cool colors come more into play for clothes and what you are wearing.

kindness is strength
Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,539
Registered: ‎03-15-2010

@Foxxee 

He looks great in warm colors.  I usually shop with him and make sure all his work colors are warm tones and coordinate well with each other.  It is so much easier when shirts, jackets, and ties mix and match for a cohesive, polished look.  I hate looking for that one tie that works with that one shirt!

Many of his work shirts. ties and jackets are custom made or special ordered because he is tall and regular length ties and such are too short.  At those $$$ mix and match is key.

 

The cool blue shirt is a beautiful shirt and looks great with black and grey trousers.  The cool blue does not look terrible on him by any means it was just jarring when teamed with the green trousers.

Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,539
Registered: ‎03-15-2010

A current head-scratcher is a friend just finished a kitchen project.

 

She picked out a cool white marble with gray veining and specks throughout, as her backsplash.  It looked great with her blue delph collection.

 

She paired it with a warm granite countertop.   Now the backsplash tile looks a muddy or dirty shade of taupe and the blue delph looks out of place.  

 

The warm and cool of the materials are not complementing each other at all.  She is ready to have all the countertops replaced (again).  I suggested she change the light bulbs in the kitchen to see if that helps.  

Honored Contributor
Posts: 8,624
Registered: ‎03-19-2014

It's not a black and white (see what I did there....and it was unintentional.....LOL) situation for me.  It all depends on the colors and shades of them whether I like the combo or not.  

Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit, but Wisdom is knowing not to put it in a fruit salad.
- Author Unknown
Honored Contributor
Posts: 19,655
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

I prefer the warm colors and tones altho my fave color is green---I chose to use griege as my color scheme in the new part of my house----the cool tones depress me as I live in WA state and 3/4 of the year is grey and gloom and rainy, altho it is very green here too---so I need the warm colors to counter all that outside. My grey is a warmer tone and the beige is too --used white to brighten and had the whole house re wired with recessed cans for light. Have oil rubbed bronze lights as my grounding pop.black is too---black--some warmth with the bronze. Paint is a warm tan with a hint of grey, and will add my green somewhere---will be moving back in this week after 4 months in a rental---can't wait!!! 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 21,139
Registered: ‎03-14-2010

I mix warm and cool tones all the time.  I feel (in decorating anyway) it gives the feeling of balance and harmony.

 

 

~Whenever a king sees that his people are about to revolt, he starts a war...~ Napoleon