Color Theory



For as far as we can comprehend in our ancient lineage, colors have had a dramatic influence on the nature of ourselves, the world and how we perceive it. We use these visuals to describe what we are seeing and as fascinating as it is, colors have a psychological component of comprehensive response to our brains. These responses that colors evoke to humans are the most important aspects of it. Colors like blue and green remind us of elatedness, serenity, and peace. While colors like brown and black induce feelings of melancholy, distress, and anguish. Of course different shades of these colors compliment their natural state of shade by attributing other characteristics to it. These differing feelings affect our perception heavily on our mood, health, and other factors that surround us every day. Because of our perception of color, it can be appealing or appalling. This stresses more of a psychological effect of what color truly means in our world versus its actual nature which often isn’t discussed enough to be of importance. We as humans tend to give these colors meaning rather than finding the actual nature of colors. Maybe the perception of the colors is what gives us the effect of creating a delusion of what they mean. In other words, essence is in the eye of the beholder, even colors.

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