Color Tips & Color Emotions
Using colors to connect with your
audience
You know what you want to say, and you know exactly how you
want to lay it out. Great, youre about half way home. Copy and layout are
the first part of presenting your information, but maybe not the most important
part. Before your audience begins to read and react to your information they
see it in colour.
Color creates audience responses by stimulating
emotions and communicating on levels other than reason and intellect. It can
excite, impress, entertain and persuade, but colour can also create instant
negative associations. Its a good idea to be aware of how the majority of
people respond to color and use this information in your choice of colors. Use
the guidelines in the chart below to help you choose the colors that are most
appropriate for the message you want to get across.
Color Chart
The chart below represents several meaning for
color. Each color may represent another emotion to you. Use your best judgment
when dealing with color and make sure to get feedback on the colors you
use.
| Red |
Aggressive, strong &
heavy |
|
| Blue |
Comfort, loyalty &
security |
|
| Yellow |
Caution, Spring &
brightness |
|
| Green |
Money, health, food &
nature |
|
| Brown |
Nature, aged, &
eccentric |
|
| Orange |
Warmth, excitement, &
energy |
|
| Pink |
Soft, healthy, childlike &
feminine |
|
| Purple |
Royalty, sophistication &
religion |
|
| Black |
Dramatic, classy &
serious |
|
| Gray |
Business, cold &
distinctive |
|
| White |
Clean, pure & simple |
|
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more colors |
When choosing colors for your
design, remember a few rules for mixing colors. The human eye cannot focus on
red and blue at the same time. Trying to read red type on a blue background or
vice versa causes extreme eye fatigue. Your audience will not be receptive to
your message if it hurts them to read it. Never, ever use blue type on a red
background and even worse, is red type on a blue background.
Most colors
go well together with members of the same "family". Warm colors of type, such
as red, brown, orange and yellow look better together in combination warm
coloured backgrounds; cool coloured type like blue, green, gray and white with
cool colored backgrounds. Using colour families generally makes for a more
appealing presentation, especially for large amounts of
information.
Contrast is fun and can be used effectively to accent
information and draw attention to items. In general, keep the contrast low. Too
much contrast makes your work difficult to digest. For type, keep the contrast
reasonable no matter what colors youre working with. If your background
has a value of, say 20%, and the type has a value of 80%, it presents a subtle
look that's easy on the eyes and is graphically appealing. Avoid the
extremes.
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