Color Theory for Fashionistias - Three Easy Steps to Perfect
Color Every Time
Color is everywhere, in your clothes, in your jewelry. Color is
life. Fashion and color coordination can make or break your
carefuly planned outfit.
Here's a bit of color theory with a fashionista bent.
Primary colors
These are red, blue and yellow. In theory, you can make any
color from these three primaries (except white, which is really
an absence of color). In practice, it depends on what red, blue
or yellow you start with, but we are not mixing paints here, so
just remember that the primary colors are red, blue and yellow.
You'll learn why in the next step.
The secondary colors are the colors you get from mixing equal
amounts of any two primaries. (If the primaries are pure, mixing
all three will give you black.)
The secondaries are purple, orange and green.
Now why do you care?
Well, primaries and secondaries together give us complementary
colors. The complement of the color is the color directly across
from it on the color wheel, or if starting with a primary, the
color made from mixing the other two primaries. So essentially a
color and its complement contain all of the primaries between
them.
Red's compliment is green (Merry Christmas!). Yellow's
complement is purple. Blue's complement is orange. This is as
much contrast as you can get between colors of the same value
(brightness or darkness). So if you want to make a bold
statement, the primaries are a treat.
Enter the secondaries
The secondary colors are made by mixing equal parts of any two
complementaries. So the secondary colors are green (yellow and
blue), orange (yellow and red) and purple (blue and red).
Let's say you have a yellow dress and you want this outfit to be
a traffic stopper. If it's for daytime, you can use bold purple
jewelry and accessories. This classic combination of purple and
yellow is eye catching. It can be sophisticated and definite or
more playful, depending on the yellow and purple you start out
with.
However, you don't always want to be quite that much the center
of attention. What do you do to make more subtle fashion
statements, but still use colors well?
The yellow and purple we used above are complementary colors.
This means they are directly across from each other on the color
wheel.
The colors to each side of our main color's complement are the
triad colors. (Triad because the color you start with plus the
two others make three colors total.) The triads are our friends
for choosing jewelry or other accessories. Let's look at our
yellow dress again. This time we're wearing it to a business
meeting. What would be appropriate jewelry? Gold on yellow is
too close -- it will tend to wash out. The whole outfit will
look drab (more drab than if you didn't use the gold jewelry).
Silver will work, particularly if the silver is a bit pale and
the yellow of the dress if very vivid. But you don't have to
stick with gold or silver. There are many colored gems and
jewels out there. Try a sapphire necklace. The blue will nicely
set off the yellow and both will sparkle. Or a red brooch. The
red can tend towards orange for a brighter effect or towards
blue for more contrast.
Now how about the vivid purple blouse you just adore? How to
accessorize it? The purple is already such a bold color. Well,
we'll do exactly the opposite of what we have done with our
yellow dress, since purple is yellow's complement.
For our purple blouse, if you want to be bold and outrageous, go
for bright gold (yellow) or just plain yellow jewelry. Silver
will not work with the purple since the blue of the silver is
too close to our purple color (as the gold was on the yellow
dress). Of course red is wonderful with purple, just showing
that every rule is made to be broken (with discrimination and
taste, of course).
We can team our purple blouse with a tan skirt (tan being a form
of yellow) and dress it down for a business meeting. We'll want
our jewelry to be a little more subtle. In this case, rather
than yellow, let's use the triad colors to purple -- orange or
green. These may seem like bold choices, but remember you want
your jewelry to be seen, not to blend into the woodwork.
How about an amber pendant? This would be sophisticated and
would be set off wonderfully by the purple background without
being garish.
Or an emerald brooch and earrings, or a green frog pin. The
possibilities are endless within your basic color choices. If
you stick with these color constraints, you will not go wrong.
Now let's consider the classic grey business suit. You may be
thinking that your grey suit is neutral so you can choose any
color at all. This is rarely the case and can be the cause of
that ensemble that doesn't quite work.
Most greys tend towards blue (cool) or red/yellow (warm). So
first determine if your suit is cool grey or warm grey. If
you're having trouble with this (and it can be tough at first),
try holding it up to other grey items in your house. You'll
start to notice that it looks a bit redder (or yellower) or a
bit more blue. This will help you determine the color bias of
your grey suit.
Most warm grey used in clothing is a reddish grey. This is
because red complements the complexion. But you will find some
yellowish greys, particularly in garments with very
sophisticated color.
Let's say our suit is a cool grey, so for the purposes of our
color choice we'll consider it blue. The complement of blue is
orange.
We want to keep this a business suit, so we'll pick the triad to
each side of the orange to start with. Red and yellow. This
tells us that gold will be a perfect choice for our grey suit.
Silver is too blue and would wash out the outfit. You may have
noticed that gold tends towards red or yellow. If you are using
more than one accessory with the gold, determine whether the
primary gold jewelry you will be wearing is reddish gold or
yellow gold.
This is done just as we did with the suit itself, by comparing
it with other colors.
If the gold is reddish, then keep your other accessories in the
red and yellow range. If the gold if yellow, keep the other
colors in the yellow orange range.
Note, the description "yellow gold" is for any gold that is not
white (silvery). Yellow golds range from a deep red to a very
pale yellow, so be sure to check each piece of jewelry when
putting together your outfit. A red gold and a yellow gold next
to each other will look subtly wrong, unless they are carefully
combined in a single piece by a master jeweler. A lack of
understanding about the tendencies of gold to be manifested as
different colors results in fashion mistakes are that are hard
to pin down.
So, let's say we've chosen a beautiful golden horse pin as our
primary jewelry piece. We look at it and realize that it tends,
ever so slightly, towards red. This makes the rest of our
accessorizing easy.
We'll go for red and even towards the cooler reds (those tending
towards purple, rather than towards the yellows and oranges).
With our golden horse brooch and a deep slightly purplish red
scarf our grey business suit stays business-like but acquires a
powerful feminine appeal.
If you want more color, choose red's triads, blue or yellow.
So, when choosing the jewelry to complement any outfit follow
three simple steps and you won't go wrong:
1) Determine the base color of your clothing. This is the
dominant color. If you're wearing the purple blouse with a tan
skirt the purple is the dominant color.
If the outfit has a pattern, squint at it and try to see what
color feels most dominant (this is an old artist's trick). If no
particular color stands out, determine if the overall pattern is
cool or warm as we did with our grey suit. Again squinting helps.
2) Find the complement of this color on your color wheel. If you
really want to stand out, use the complement and stop at this
step -- you're done!
3) Look at the triad colors next to the complement. These are
most often the colors you will use for your accessories. If you
want a brighter look you can use both triads. For a more subtle
look, choose one or the other and then use variations on this
color (the variations on any one color are almost endless).
That's it -- three easy steps that will assure that your outfits
are always tres chic and save you hours trying to figure out
what's just not quite right or choosing by hit and miss.
Of course, fashion colors change from year to year, but you now
understand color combinations and how to put them together in
wow combinations, whatever colors your starting with.
Coming in part two, how colors effect each other.
To see this page with color wheels and other illustrations that
you can print for reference, go to
http://www.gorgeousanimaljewelry.com/fashion-colors.html
Style on!
Carrie The Jewelry Maven http://www.gorgeousanimaljewelry.com