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#and has the popularity to popularize one design. ill be using the original rainbow flag. the one with the pink stripe and all
courtneyrobinson97 · 5 years
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IXD103 & IXD104 Colour Exploration
Exploring Colour
When we consider what is colour, we invariably go back to the explanation first given by Sir Isaac Newton in 1666. Colour is a part of the electromagnetic spectrum and has always been so. Colour is immediate: it conveys emotions and, to many people, it helps make decisions. Ask some people what is colour and chances are you will get the answer: colour is memorable and emotional.
What is colour?
To understand what colour is, let us consider how Newton studied the concept. He basically passed a narrow beam of sunlight through a prism placed in a dark room. On the other end, on a white screen, the visible spectrum including red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet were visible. While it was already known that the light passed would show the rainbow colours, Newton’s experiment showed what is colour and how each colour bent at certain angles. White light passed through a second prism changed all the visible colours back to white light.
We therefore cannot consider ‘what is colour’ without considering three other factors:
Light – the main source of colour
The object – its material and its reaction to colour
The eye – the perceiver of colour
To define what is colour, we can say that it is powerful medium that can motivate, persuade and inspire.
Red
The Meanings of Red
Red is the colour of extremes. It’s the colour of passionate love, seduction, violence, danger, anger, and adventure. Our prehistoric ancestors saw red as the colour of fire and blood – energy and primal life forces – and most of red’s symbolism today arises from its powerful associations in the past.
Red is also a magical and religious colour. It symbolised super-human heroism to the Greeks and is the colour of the Christian crucifixion. Red was almost as rare and as expensive as purple in ancient days – a fact that may explain its magic and power. Paradoxically, today’s intense red dyes come from crushed insects (the lac beetle and the cochineal).
Global Meanings of Red
Red’s global similarities are significant:
Red is one of the top two favourite colours of all people.
Red is the most popular colour used on flags in the world. Approximately 77% of all flags include red.
Red is the international colour for stop. Red districts sell sex and pornography in every European culture. The history of languages reveals that red is the first colour after black and white. (All languages have words for black and white. If a third hue exists, it is red.)
Unique Meanings of Red in Different Cultures
Red is the colour of good luck in Asia and is the most popular colour in China.
Most Japanese children draw the sun as a big red circle. In East Asian stock markets, red is used to denote a rise in stock prices. (Note: In North American stock markets, red is used to denote a drop in stock prices.)
Red is an auspicious colour for marriage. Brides in India and Nepal wear red saris; in Japan, a red kimono symbolises happiness and good luck.
Designing with Red
All reds are not created equal. Aside from light and dark shades of red, there are two kinds of red:
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Yellow-based reds are “tomato” reds. Blue-based reds are “berry reds.” Some say that males are more attracted to the tomato reds: females to the berry reds.
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Context is everything when using red. For example, when red is place on a black background, it glows with an otherworldly fire; on a white background, red appears somewhat duller; in contrast with orange, red appears lifeless. Notice that the red square appears larger on black.
Regardless of how it is used in a design, a little bit of red goes a long way.
How Red Affects Vision
Red captures attention. It is one of the most visible colours, second only to yellow - which explains why it is used on fire engines and stop signs to trigger alertness.
Red focuses behind the retina which forces the lens grows more convex to pull it forward. Therefore, we perceive that red areas are moving forward. This may explain why red captures attention.
Note: Eight percent of the male population has a red-green colour vision deficiency and cannot see red at all
Myths about Red
“They” claim that red raises your blood pressure and quickens your heartbeat. Yes, red is a strong colour but its immediate effects are only temporary and do not apply to everyone.
Yellow
The Meanings of Yellow
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Yellow is the most luminous of all the colours of the spectrum. It’s the colour that captures our attention more than any other colour.
In the natural world, yellow is the colour of sunflowers and daffodils, egg yolks and lemons, canaries and bees. In our contemporary human-made world, yellow is the colour of Sponge Bob, the Tour de France winner’s jersey, happy faces, post its, and signs that alert us to danger or caution.
It’s the colour of happiness, and optimism, of enlightenment and creativity, sunshine and spring.
Lurking in the background is the dark side of yellow: cowardice, betrayal, egoism, and madness. Furthermore, yellow is the colour of caution and physical illness (jaundice, malaria, and pestilence). Perhaps it’s no coincidence that the sources of yellow pigments are toxic metals - cadmium, lead, and chrome - and urine.
Global Meanings of Yellow
Yellow's global similarities are significant:
In almost every culture yellow represents sunshine, happiness, and warmth.
Yellow is the colour most often associated with the deity in many religions (Hinduism and Ancient Egypt)
Yellow is the colour of traffic lights and signs indicating caution all over the world.
Unique Meanings of Yellow in Different Cultures
In Japan, yellow often represents courage.
In China, adult movies are referred to as yellow movies.
In Russia, a colloquial expression for an insane asylum used to be "yellow house."
Bright “marigold” yellow may be associated with death in some areas of Mexico. Those condemned to die during the Inquisition wore yellow as a sign of treason.
A yellow patch was used to label Jews in the Middle Ages. European Jews were forced to wear yellow or yellow “Stars of David” during the Nazi era of prosecution.
Designing with Yellow
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Although there are strong mustard yellows and deep yellow ochres, there are no dark yellows.
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Yellow is the only colour that reacts badly to black: Add a little black and it becomes a sickly yellow-green.
How Yellow Affects Vision
Yellow is the most visible colour of the spectrum.
The human eye processes yellow first. This explains why it is used for cautionary signs and emergency rescue vehicles.
Peripheral vision is 2.5 times higher for yellow than for red.
Yellow has a high light reflectance value and therefore it acts as a secondary light source.  Excessive use of bright yellow (such as on interior walls) can irritate the eyes.
Myths About the Effects of Yellow
It is not true that babies cry more in yellow rooms, or that yellow causes diarrhoea, or that husbands and wives fight more in yellow kitchens.
Blue
The Meanings of Blue
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Blue is the favourite colour of all people. It’s nature’s colour for water and sky, but is rarely found in fruits and vegetables. Today, blue is embraced as the colour of heaven and authority, denim jeans and corporate logos. It is cold, wet, and slow as compared to red’s warmth, fire, and intensity.
Blue has more complex and contradictory meanings than any other colour.  These can be easily explained by pinpointing by the specific shade of blue.
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Dark blue: trust, dignity, intelligence, authority
Bright blue: cleanliness, strength, dependability, coolness (The origin of these meanings arise from the qualities of the ocean and inland waters, most of which are more tangible.)
Light (sky) blue: peace, serenity, ethereal, spiritual, infinity (The origin of these meanings is the intangible aspects of the sky.)
Most blues convey a sense of trust, loyalty, cleanliness, and understanding. On the other hand, blue evolved as symbol of depression in American culture. “Singing the blues” and feeling blue” are good examples of the complexity of colour symbolism and how it has been evolved in different cultures.
Global Meanings of Blue
Blue's global similarities are significant:
Blue is the #1 favourite colour of all people.
53% of the flags in the world contain blue.   Blue is the most commonly used colour in corporate identity.
A dark blue suit is professional business attire. Blue jeans are worn all over the world.
Aristocracy is blue-blooded in all European languages.
Unique Meanings of Blue in Different Cultures
Greeks believe that blue wards off "the evil eye.
The English “to feel blue” has no equivalent in other languages while in German “blau sein” (literally: to be blue) means to be drunk or in Russian “голубой” (literally: light blue) means to be homosexual.
Dark blue is the colour of mourning in Korea.
The god Krishna has blue skin.
Shades of blue are described as shallow or deep instead of light or dark in China. Blue is for a baby girl; pink for a baby boy in Belgium.
“Prince Charming” is called “The Blue Prince” in Italy and Spain.
Designing with Blue
Blue ranks so high as a favourite colour that you can’t go wrong if you use blue. However, blue can be over-used and may wind up a design cliché if used alone. Combining blue with another colour creates a more creative effect.
Blue is the only colour which maintains its own character in all its tones... it will always stay blue;” Raoul Dufy, French Fauvist Painter, 1877-1953
How Blue Affects Vision
Blue is sharply refracted by the eyes. This causes the lens to flatten and to push the blue image back. We perceive that blue areas are receding and smaller.
The same refraction causes visual fog if used excessively in interior spaces.
Green
The Meanings of Green
Green is no longer just a colour. It's now the symbol of ecology and a verb.
Since the beginning of time, green has signified growth, rebirth, and fertility. In pagan times, there was the "Green Man" - a symbol of fertility.  In Muslim countries, it is a holy colour and in Ireland, a lucky colour. It was the colour of the heavens in the Ming Dynasty.
Today's greens can be found in a wide range of objects: pea soup, delicate celadon glazes, sleazy shag carpet, sickly bathroom walls, emeralds, wasabi, and sage. The English language reflects some strange attributes: Would you rather be green with envy, green behind the ears, or green around the gills? (Idiomatic American English for extremely envious, immature or nauseated.)
Global Meanings of Green
Green is universally associated with nature.
Green symbolises ecology and the environment.
Traffic lights are green all over the world.
Unique Meanings of Green in Different Cultures
In China, Green may symbolise infidelity. A green hat symbolises that a man's wife is cheating on him.
In Israel, green may symbolise bad news.
In Japan, the words for blue and green ("ao") are the same.
In Spain, racy jokes are "green."
Luck or Bad Luck?
   Green is a lucky culture in most Western cultures. A green shamrock symbolises this.
   You won't find many green cars at racetracks because they are considered unlucky.
   Circus and traveling showmen in Australia may consider green to be bad luck.
   An old English rhyme about wedding colours: "Married in green, Ashamed to be seen."
Designing with Green
There are more shades of green than that of any other colour. Greens range from yellow-greens, such as lime and avocado greens, to those with a blue tinge (such as emerald).  Aqua or turquoise are colours that are typically half green and half blue.
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How Green Affects Vision
Colour Blindness
Approximately 5% - 8% of men and 0.5% of women of the world are born colourblind. People who are protans (red weak) and deutans (green weak) comprise 99% of this group.
Some European countries have outlined certain traffic light colours so that it is clear which is green and which is red, by the colour that has a rectangle around it. Some states in the U.S. have placed diagonal lines through green traffic lights as an aid for the colourblind.
Signage: Green vs. Red Exit Signs 
Green exit signs have an important advantage when there is smoke in the air (in other words, when a fire is burning). With red exit signs, it looks like a fire - firemen have actually rushed into burning buildings and tried to put out the signs! With a green sign, people know it isn't the fire itself but the way to safety.
Not only should Exit signs be Green to correspond to the established International Standard for Safety Signs since the early 70's but they should also have the International Standard Graphical symbol for exit as given in ISO 6309 and ISO/DIS 3864 Part 1 and Part 2. It is time to consider that all exit signs should be the same throughout the world. Time to wake up USA and join the International Community. (www.means-of-escape.com)
Myths about the Effects of Green on the Body
When one sleeps on a pea-green pillow, it prevents baldness.
Green is the best colour for pregnant women.
Purple
The Meanings of Purple
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Purple’s rarity in nature and the expense of creating the colour and has given purple a supernatural aura for centuries. Purple is also the most powerful wavelength of the rainbow – and it’s a colour with a powerful history that has evolved over time. In fact, the origins of the symbolism of purple are more significant and interesting than those of any other colour.
If we go back to our pre-historic existence, our ancestors probably never saw a purple fruit, flower, bird, fish - or any living thing - because purple is very rare in nature. This is hard to imagine in today’s connected world.
As civilisations developed, so did clothing and coloured dyes. The earliest purple dyes date back to about 1900 B.C. It took some 12,000 shellfish to extract 1.5 grams of the pure dye - barely enough for dying a single garment the size of the Roman toga. It’s no wonder then, that this colour was used primarily for garments of the emperors or privileged individuals.
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Over the course of history, purple pigments and dyes became less costly and complex, but one thing has remained the same: Purple symbolises nobility and luxury to most people in the world.
Today, science has revealed much more about purple than our ancestors ever realised: Purple is the most powerful visible wavelength of electromagnetic energy.  It’s just a few steps away from x-rays and gamma rays. (See the chart here.) Perhaps this explains why purple is associated with supernatural energy and the cosmos than with the physical world as we know it.
Taking all aspects of purple’s past and present into consideration, purple symbolises magic, mystery, spirituality, the sub-conscious, creativity, dignity, royalty – and it evokes all of these meanings more so than any other colour.
Variations of purple convey different meanings: Light purples are light-hearted, floral, and romantic. The dark shades are more intellectual and dignified.
The negative meanings of purple are decadence, conceit, and pomposity. Purple is also a colour of mourning.
One of the most significant aspects of purple’s symbolism is the generational divide. There’s a huge difference of opinions about purple. It all depends on age.
Most young people view purple as a happy colour. No baggage. Older adults view the colour through a broader perspective. Furthermore, purple takes on new meanings in many cultures.
Global Meanings of Purple
Purple's global similarities are significant:
Purple tends to be a colour that people either love or hate.
Among Mediterranean people, purple was reserved for emperors and popes. The Japanese christened it “Imperial Purple”
Purple is the colour of mourning or death in many cultures (U.K., Italy, Thailand, Brazil)
Purple is not a common flag colour. Only two flags contain purple.
Unique Meanings of Purple in Different Cultures
The “Purple Heart” is the American award for bravery.
Purple is a symbolic colour for the gay community in many Western cultures.
Purple is the colour of popular children's television characters – "Barney" and "Tinky Winky" (the purple Teletubby from the BBC).
In Italy most performing artists would not go on stage if they have to wear anything purple.
Designing with Purple
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The opposites of hot red and cool blue combine to create this intriguing colour.
There are three distinct purples: Red-Purple, Purple, Blue-Purple. Red-purples are warm, blue-purples are cool, and pure purple is neutral.
How Purple Affects Vision
Purple is the hardest colour for the eye to discriminate. Have some fun!: You won't believe your eyes: Watch the Lilac Chaser
Myths about the Effects of Purple on the Body
Purples have been used in the care of mental of nervous disorders because they have shown to help balance the mind and transform obsessions and fears.
Most psychologists view these claims with skepticism. No valid studies have been conducted to confirm them.
Orange
The Meanings of Orange
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Orange is vibrant. It’s hot, healthy, fruity and engaging – but it can be abrasive and crass. It’s a polarising colour. People either love it or detest it.
Orange is the only colour of the spectrum whose name was taken from an object, the popular fruit - the orange. In nature it’s the colour of vivid sunsets, fire, vegetables, flowers, fish, and many citrus fruits. In our contemporary world, orange is the colour of marmalade, Halloween, traffic cones, life rafts, cheetos, and Halloween. Orange symbolises energy, vitality, cheer, excitement, adventure, warmth, and good health. However, pure orange can be brass; however, it may suggest a lack of serious intellectual values and bad taste.
Orange is currently a trendy, hip colour. It was a “groovy colour” back in the 70s and then it faded away. In 1991, an article in Forbes magazine about how orange affects consumer choices concluded that orange meant cheap. (Note: “Cheap” in this case meant a good buy for the money.)
It’s worth noting that there are many shades of orange – and different meanings. Some may be more appealing to those who find orange difficult: terracotta or cayenne – a dark orange, persimmon - a red-orange, pumpkin - a pure orange, mango - a yellow orange, salmon - a pink orange, melon - a light orange,.
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Darker oranges offer a sense of comfort; some are spicy, some are earthy. Lighter oranges are soothing and healthy.
Global Meanings of Orange
Orange's global similarities are significant:
Orange evokes the taste of healthy fruits, bursting with juice.
Orange is associated with vitamin C and good health.
Orange is symbolic of autumn.
Children all over the world are drawn to orange.
Orange is the colour of life rafts, hazard cones, and high visibility police vests.
Unique Meanings of Orange in Different Cultures
Orange is both the name and emblematic colour of the royal family in the Netherlands.
Orange is the colour of prison uniforms in the U.S.
Orange (saffron) is a sacred and auspicious colour in Hinduism.
The middle traffic light is orange in France.
In the U.K., orange stands for the Northern Irish Protestants and has very strong religious and political significance.
Designing with Orange
Orange is an excellent example of this design rule: There are no bad colours; only bad colour combinations.
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The complementary colour scheme – orange and blue – is dynamic.
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The triad colour scheme – orange, green, and purple – is exceptional.
How Orange Affects Vision
“Safety orange” is used to set objects apart from their surroundings, particularly in complementary contrast to the azure colour of the sky. It’s used for hunting and construction zone marking devices.
Myths about the Effects of Orange on the Body
Orange is used to increase immunity, to increase sexual potency, to help in all digestive ailments, chest and kidney diseases.
Pink
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Pink is a combination of the colour red and white, a hue that can be described as a tint. It can range from berry (blue-based) pinks to salmon (orange-based) pinks. Its symbolism is complex and its popularity is subject to so many influences.
We can begin an analysis of pink by looking at natural and contemporary sources of this delicate colour. First, regardless of your skin colour, some part of your body is pink. So are sunsets, watermelons and Pepto Bismal. Depending on your age and culture, you may remember pink Cadillacs, pink flamingos (once considered in bad taste in American culture but now retro-chic), Pink Floyd, the Pink Panther, and the pink triangles of the Third Reich (which were used to identify male homosexuals).
In almost every culture, one stereotype emerges: pink is associated with girls, blue with boys. Unfortunately, there is no consensus of opinion on its origin.
According to Jean Heifetz, for centuries, all European children were dressed in blue because the colour was associated with the Virgin Mary. The use of pink and blue emerged at the turn of the century, the rule being pink for boys, blue for girls. Since pink was a stronger colour it was best suited for boys; blue was more delicate and dainty and best for girls. And in 1921, the Women's Institute for Domestic Science in Pennsylvania endorsed pink for boys, blue for girls. (When Blue Meant Yellow. pp. 20 -21) One could argue that contemporary colour symbolism confirms these associations. Blue is considered a calm, passive colour, hence feminine. Red (pink derived from red) is considered active hence masculine.
On the other hand, the idea of associating blue with male babies may stem back to ancient times when having a boy was good luck. Blue, the colour of the sky where gods and fates lived, held powers to ward off evil, so baby boys where dressed in blue. In Greece a blue eye is still thought to have powers to ward off evil. The idea of pink for girls might come from the European legend that baby girls were born inside delicate pink roses.
Another theory states that the sexual origins can be found in ancient China. At a time when certain dyes were quite rare, pink dye was readily available and therefore inexpensive. Since blues were rare and expensive, it was therefore considered to be more worthwhile to dress your son in blue, because when he married the family would receive a dowry.
The origin of the English term "pink" is as valuable as any discourse on symbolism. Here are some interesting analyses: In English, the word "pink" could be derived from the Dutch flower pinken dating back to 1681. The flower's name could have originally been "pink eye" or "small eye." Another possibility is the verb "to pink" - to prick or cut around the edges, as with pinking shears. The jagged petals of the flower looked as though they had been cut, thus explaining why it became known as the "pink." (Jean Heifetz, When Blue Meant Yellow, p 110) Finally, going back to the ancient Egypt, the flamingo was the hieroglyph for the colour red. In colloquial language, to be "tickled pink" describes a state of joy, a "pink slip" is a notice that you've been fired from your job, to be "in the pink" suggest good fortune and health, and a "pinko" is a person who is extremely liberal, a socialist or a communist.
In conclusion, consider the following: Although sunburned skin and watermelons are pink's natural associations, the colour is loaded with historical meaning, knee-jerk reflexes and cliches. In some cases, it is quite appropriate; in others, perhaps the only cliche worth using is one, which is ripe for a vivid transformation.
Sources:
https://www.color-meanings.com/what-is-color-and-how-do-we-use-them/
https://www.colormatters.com/
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