Acrylic
Class – Color Mixing 101
As
humans we are a curious species and we like to analyze everything and that
includes the whys and wherefores of art. The Ancient Greeks set up committees
to better understand why we like some things better than other even when the
quality was equal and came up with what they called “The Golden Mean” we call
it the Rule of Thirds today but that was just the beginning into how to create
the perfect art masterpiece. We still do it today and there are volumes and
volumes written on every aspect of art and while some of it might be helpful to
the everyday artist sometimes there is just too much information and proves to
be more confusing than helpful, Color mixing and Color Theory are no excepting
to the rule. I don’t want you to discourage you from learning more on the
subject but sometimes having a basic understanding of the subject is helpful
when you want to learn more because it will make more sense to you. This is
going to be a VERY basic introduction to color mixing but it should be helpful
to you in your efforts to create your own masterpiece.
There
are 3 Primary colors and their 3 Complimentary Or Secondary colors, these
colors and their combinations should be burned into your brains if you are
going to paint in color. The PRIMARY COLORS are: RED,
YELLOW and BLUE.
What that means is there is no way to mix any other colors together to get any
of the three primary colors, you must have a source of red, yellow or blue to
get these colors. SECONDARY colors on the other hand, are the combination of
two primary colors. The 3 Complimentary colors are: ORANGE, GREEN and PURPLE.
You can buy a color wheel at the art store or
better yet, make your own so you can learn about the primary and complimentary
colors. You can make a circle on your paper or a canvas and then in the 12, 4
and 8 positions put a patch of your primary color (R,Y,B). Midway between the
red and the yellow, apply a patch of orange. Midway between the yellow and the
blue apply a patch of green and midway between the red and the blue apply a
patch of purple. While it is good practice to mix these complimentary colors
for your wheel, if you have premixed tube colors, that is okay too, the goal
here is to create your color wheel.
Now look at your wheel and memorize these
colors and what is directly across from it on the color wheel. The colors
directly across from each other on the color wheel are COMPLIMENTARY COLORS. If
you have these colors together in a painting they will complement each other giving
a pleasant visual balance to the painting. For instance, if you are painting
something with a lot of red in it adding green will enhance your painting more
than adding say orange.
Most beginning artists do not have a problem
when it comes to mixing mud, the problem comes from how NOT to mix mud or how
to control the amount of mud you mix. The way you get mud is when ALL 3 PRIMARY
COLORS ARE PRESENT. Mixing a primary and its complement together will get
you some form of brown or gray. For instance, if you take the primary color
blue and you mix it with orange (yellow with red) you will get a steel gray
color if it is more to the blue side and a rich brown color if it is more to
the orange side. Yellow and purple (blue with red) makes a great sand color.
Red and green (blue with yellow) make rich browns and grays. There are some
artists who only use the 3 primary colors with white (oils, acrylics or other
opaque medium) and maybe black and that is it for their palette and they can
mix any color they need but it takes years of practice to get the subtle differences
in color and most of us aren’t that patient so getting pre-mixed colors saves
us some time but we still need to understand the reasons behind what we are
doing on the palette or our canvas.
By-the-way, all of this applies no matter
what medium you are using. It doesn’t matter if it is acrylic, oil, watercolor,
pastel, colored inks, anytime you are using color, these guidelines apply. If
you ever want to try pastels, you really need to know more or less what you are
going to get because you mix the color on your paper by putting 2 or more
colors down then blending them with your finger or a blending tool.
Now why, you might ask, do I need to know
what makes gray or mud? The answer is so you know how to correct or adjust you
colors.
Most modern colors that you buy premixed at
the store are usually too intense in color to use straight out of the tube and
you need to know how to “tone them down”, greens can be particularly
challenging out of the tube and need to be quieted to look more natural. For
example, knowing that by adding some form of red to your green, be it red,
orange, burnt sienna (which is in the orange family) or purple for shadow
greens, will go a long way to improving your overall painting. This goes for
all your colors.
Before I close this, I want to touch on a
trend in the manufactured paint of ever expanding palette of colors, you now
have many choices for a similar color. Blues, for instance, may say red hue or
green hue or variation. All this means is instead of being a true blue color it
has more red or yellow (respectively) and this will affect the color depending
on what other color you have mixed into it. Bottom line is “Do you like the
color?” if the answer is yes, then you may have to do some testing just to see
how it mixes with your other colors or maybe you have to save it for special
circumstances when you don’t have to mix it too much to use it. Art is all
about you, if you like it, that is what matters sometimes it can take years of
experimenting with color to find the combinations of color that work best for
you needs, just never be afraid to try something new or to test your new color
because they are all different even between the different manufacturers.
No pictures for this blog because your results
will be different from mine and that is okay, we will be working on perspective
and atmospheric perspective next class so practice those grays!
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