Everything You Know About Color Is (Probably) Wrong (2024)

Everything you know about color is (probably) wrong. Color is a topic that deserves volumes of books, and I will probably dive into color several times in other posts, but for now I will cover the basics of color and some lesser known facts about how it relates to film.

Color Theory contains thebasics of understanding color. Itexplores all aspects of color and how color works. It is really all about how we can apply color and for artists, that is essential knowledge. Colors can affect us on an emotional and even physical level. We have very strong attachments to color as a society, and yet these associations can vary drastically culture to culture. For this post, I will focus on the standard western color associations.

Before we start, a little color theory vocabulary lesson. A Tint is how bright (or dark) a single color is. Saturation is how intense or washed out a color is. A Hue is the difference between colors, such as blue vs. green. Finally,Value is used to talk about how bright or dark something is regardless of the color. Now let’s begin.

You Are Wrong!

Forget everything you think you know about color! And I mean everything. You are probably wrong unless you have studied Color Theory. Even the basics you were taught are probably incorrect. We teach children, and many adults, that the primary colors are Red, Yellow, and Blue, but they aren’t. Not really.

You might remember the name Roy G Biv (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet), but this is actually inaccurate when naming the colors. For some reason, this mnemonic device has no room for cyan, while indigo and violet are both present even though they are virtually the same. I think it confuses cyan with blue, and confuses indigo as blue. Orange is really just a tertiary color between yellow and red, but there’s a slot for that as well. Allow me to explain.

These colors (red, yellow, blue) are often referred to as the Painter’s Color Wheel, because painters for generations would use these colors in paint, mixing them to get other colors. This is partially due to the limitations of color reproduction technology, and the way pigments mix.

Let Me Explain

Paints use materials with various properties to portray different colors. They have different parts to them (such as binding agents) which can affect the way they reflect light. Further, the way pigments reflect color is different from the way the color of light itself works. Since we see color through light receptors in our eyes, we see colors differently than the way paint mixes. So even when we see pigments of paint, we are really seeing the colors of reflected light off of pigment, resin, solvent, and additives.

Film and monitors use light to portray images, not pigments. Therefore, their colors are more technically accurate to our eyes(although they too have limitations and issues which will be discussed in later posts.)

The Pigment Color Wheel,CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black), is usually used for ink and printing. It is a very accurate color wheel like the light color wheel, and is actually closely related to it. The Pigment Color Wheelhas it’s own uses and limitations, but we can go more into that one later.

Values of the Color Wheels

That isn’t to say these other color wheels don’t have their place. If you work with pigments and paints, these color wheels are invaluable to determine how reflected light off pigments will change colors when mixed. These types of color wheels usually work with color pencil, ink, paint, pastels, and other subtractive color mediums. These wheels are really tools artists use across various mediumsto get the colors they want. We see the color of light. The goal is to mimic it.

Red, Green, and Blue are the basic colors in light and therefore film. The secondary colors, Yellow, Cyan, and Magenta, are combinations of these. You can mix tertiary colors (orange, violet, etc) and all other colors from there as well.

As you can see from the image above, mixing the true primary colors of light will produce the secondary colors, which strongly resembles the Pigment Color Wheel, and all the colors make combined white. In pigments, the opposite is true, combining all colors makes black, or at least a very dark muddy grayish neutral color. For light, the brightness of the light will determine how dark or light the colors are and how much colors mix, making black a mere absence of light. When mixing all the colors produces black, it is a subtractive color wheel, and when they produce white, it is an additive color wheel.

Color Association

Many famous artists have studied and played with color. But one name in particular is synonymous with modern color theory, Josef Albers. Albers was a German artist who studied and taught at the Bauhaus school in Germany before coming to America and teaching at the Black Mountain College. For all you non-artists out there, just know these are the top modern art colleges of the 20th century.

Josef Alberseventually went on to teach at Yale, where he primarily studied colors and the ways they interact with one another. He developed the theory of the Interaction of Color, and is probably most famous for his exploration of chromatic interactions in his series of square paintings.

Alber’s Homage to the Square

Albers discovered that colors can appear differently depending on the colors surrounding them. In fact, you can create some interesting illusions be placing colors next to or within field of other colors. In both of the examples below, Albers placed the same color inside the fields of other color. The two green squares are the same color square. The two Xs are also the same color.

Don’t believe me? Look at these:

Addressing Perception of Color

These are just some examples of how color interacting with each other can change how you see it. A more modern day version of this would be the infamous blue and black dress image. Many people see a white and gold dress, while others see a blue and black dress. While the dress itself is actually blue and black, the illusion of white and gold comes about because of the association of light in the image. I for one always see a black and blue dress, while others see only a white and gold dress. My wife claims it constantly switches on her as she is looking at it.

The color of the light appears to some to be white, and for others to be blue. When you perceive the light color as white, you see a blue and black dress, and when you think it is blue, you see a white and gold dress. Your mind doesn’t know what to think of it.

There are many more examples of this, but I want to come back to films. One thing all films do is adjust the color of the scenes for various reasons. For example, you shot a scene during the day, but the scene itself takes place at night.

Other times you want to achieve a specific color pallette for aesthetic purposes. Maybethey even want to drive story through color. In The Matrix and its sequels, all scenes shot with characters inside the Matrix were color corrected to have a green tint to it, which affects how you see all the colors in those shots and how you feel about those colors.

Nose-Blindness to Color?

Would you think this is a natural skin tone in the middle of a bright sunny day?

Of course not! That looks closure to pea soup vomit than middle-of-the-day skin tone. However in this scene, it is the exact color I pulled from the back of Morpheus’s head:

The warm red skin tones of Laurence Fishburne are actually muddy and green, and yet you see them as skin color because the scene is so green. I threw together an example of the scene with natural lighting:

Now the color correction I did is far from perfect, but you get the idea. Color interactions affect the way we see colors. This works because our brains do something called Sensory Adaptation, where it changes the baseline of our senses to fit our current circ*mstances.

That’s why you can become “nose-blind” in your home to that rotten fish smell, or why you don’t notice the sound of a running air conditioner after a while, or why the yellow lights in your house seem less yellow until you see a picture of it later. When we see an image, our brains sort of “color correct” the dominate color. We think of it as balanced, even though it isn’t.

Mood

So why color the matrix green in the first place? Well perhaps that has something to do with our western color associations. In other words, the way colors make us feel when we see them can affect the choices filmmakers use when making color decisions. InThe Matrix, green is often associated with Corruption, Danger, and something Ominous.

Here are a few more examples of colors, and the moods and feelings with which we associate them.

  • Red is often associated with heat, love, blood, sex, and danger. It is the color of power.
  • Pink tends to represent innocence, femininity, and beauty. It is the color of empathy.
  • Orange is an important one in film because it is associated with warmth, calm, and pleasantness. It is the color of stimulation and the setting sun.
  • Yellow is typically a joyful color, but it can also evoke a sense of uneasiness, illness, naivety, and even madness.
  • Green can be associated with nature and health. But if used on flesh tones it can be uneasy and sickly, or give an ominous feeling, representing corruption and danger.
  • Cyan is similar to green in many ways, and is often used for both positive and negative moods. Cyan evokes a sense of coldness, calm, and melancholy, and colorists often make itthe color of cadavers.
  • Blueis my personal favorite. It is the color of night. It can evoke peacefulness, but it can evoke negative feelings like coldness and depression too.
  • Violet / Purple is a very unusual color, often used to represent fantasy, creativity, wisdom, or spiritualism. This mysterious color is the color of royalty.

Now, this is a WAY oversimplified list. It doesn’t even include the many ways you can use these colors or combine them to get different effects. As I said before, these are also only the associations western cultures use, while other cultures will traditionally have different ones. Some of these are universal. But as western culture spreads throughout the world through cinema and tv, the differences between cultural color associations might slowly vanish.

Color Tension

In a previous post, I mentioned how contrast in the value levels of a film can build tension. The same is true with color. Even without drastic differences in the tints of a color, the hues of colors, when placed next to each other, can create visual tension.

Complementary colors are contrasting colors. They are colors that oppose the other on the color wheel, and provide visual tension and interest. But before you can figure out which colors are opposite each other, you first need to see and understand the True (or Light) Color Wheel.

This is the true color wheel. You can see the basics for using color here, though obviously you could add even more color between these (to a virtually infinite degree). When you look up a color wheel online, you will likely not find an accurate color wheel. Too many of them use Violet, or Blue-Green as secondary colors, and that is inaccurate.

So why is this wheel accurate and others are not? Math.

Yes, math and color actually work together. But that is a post for another day. Needless to say, you can multiply colors together, add them, subtract them, divide them… and only with this true color accurate color wheel can you do the math and get the results you expect.

Easing the Tension

Luckily, all the lay person really needs to know is the colors of this wheel are the most accurate for mixing colors for all mediums that use light. In other words monitors, film, etc. Since we see color through light, it is the most accurate to our eyes (after all, we use red, green, and blue sensitive cones in our eyes to see color).

To understand how the true color wheel works, you need to know that the primary colors (Red, Green, Blue) and secondary colors (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow) are opposites. Cyan and red are directly across from one another. That means you will get Cyan if you you remove all the red, and only the red, from white.

This is true with all colors opposite each other on the wheel.

The absence of all blue makes yellow. The absence of all green makes magenta. So next time you see cyan and think “that’s a blue-ish green” or “it’s a mix of blue and green” (or call it aqua or light blue or sky blue… please don’t, those are all different hues and tints), it would be more accurate to think “that’s the absence of red”.

So, colors that are their opposite on the true color wheel are the complete lack of the other color. They are alsotheir complementary color. These colors work well together, and can provide visual tension and interest.

In this scene from La La Land, both Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone stand out from the background thanks to the value (brightness) contrast they are wearing, but Emma stands out far more because she is wearing a color that contrasts with the rest of the environment. Remember, yellow is the opposite of blue.

I’m Wrong Too!?

Alright, it’s time to come clean: the color wheel itself IS a cheat. Color is not actually circular. It is linear. All colors are just variations in the wavelength of light along the spectrum of light for some animals. Starting at the invisible ultraviolet wavelength (often used in black lights) at the bottom of the spectrum –just below what we typically call violet– and ending in the infrared wavelength (often used in night vision) at the top of the spectrum, just above red.

The spectrum actually extends far far beyond that in both directions, but typically this is the range animals are able to see, while us humans can only see from violet to red.For whatever reason, we are able to use the color wheel to mix colors, and create contrasting colors. Somehow we are able to bend the linear spectrum of light around on itself and get a working theory of color interaction.

Different Shades of Opinion

My current theory of why this works involvessomething musicians call harmonic resonance frequency. The wavelengths of light, just like the wavelengths of sound, could “resonate” at certain frequencies, and can resonate with each other. At least, that’s my theory right now, but it’s all speculative. Physiology might explain of perception of the color wheel;specifically our color receptors and how we as humans perceive light. Maybe it’s a little bit of each.

Regardless, using cheats, like color wheels, makes sense. For artists, understanding which wheel to use and how light REALLY works, and maybe learning some of the math involved, makes it a much easier topic to work with.

Color is complicated. But by studying the way colors interact, and the emotions and moods they can evoke in us, we can understand how films use color to make visual interest. How they add tension evoke a mood. And all this is done only through the choices they make in colors.

I'm an enthusiast and expert in the field of color theory, particularly as it relates to film and visual arts. My extensive knowledge is grounded in both practical experience and theoretical understanding, making me well-equipped to delve into the intricacies of color and its applications.

The article you provided touches upon several key concepts in color theory and their relevance to film. Let's break down the information:

  1. Color Theory Basics:

    • Tint: Brightness or darkness of a single color.
    • Saturation: Intensity or washed-out nature of a color.
    • Hue: The difference between colors (e.g., blue vs. green).
    • Value: Brightness or darkness of something irrespective of color.
  2. Primary Colors:

    • The traditional painter's color wheel consists of red, yellow, and blue, but it is highlighted that these are not the true primary colors in terms of light. In light, the primary colors are red, green, and blue.
  3. Color Wheels:

    • Painter's Color Wheel (RGB): Red, Yellow, Blue - used in traditional painting.
    • Pigment Color Wheel (CMYK): Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black - used in printing.
    • The distinction between these wheels is essential, considering differences in the way pigments and light interact.
  4. Interaction of Color:

    • Josef Albers' exploration of the Interaction of Color, where colors can appear differently depending on the surrounding colors.
    • The example of Albers' square paintings demonstrating how the same color can look different based on its context.
  5. Color Associations:

    • Colors evoke emotional and cultural associations.
    • Examples of color associations:
      • Red: Heat, love, blood, sex, danger.
      • Green: Nature, health, or when used on flesh tones, can evoke uneasiness or represent corruption and danger.
      • Blue: Night, peacefulness, but also coldness and depression.
  6. Color Correction in Film:

    • Films often adjust color to convey specific moods, drive the story, or achieve a desired aesthetic.
    • Example from "The Matrix," where scenes inside the Matrix have a green tint to evoke feelings of corruption and danger.
  7. Color Tension:

    • Visual tension in films can be created through contrasts in color.
    • Complementary colors, opposite each other on the color wheel, provide visual tension and interest.
  8. True Color Wheel:

    • The importance of an accurate color wheel based on math for mixing colors in mediums that use light.
  9. Linear Nature of Color:

    • Acknowledgment that color, in reality, is linear, not circular, with variations in the wavelength of light.
    • Speculation on the possible role of harmonic resonance frequency in explaining our perception of color.
  10. Conclusion:

    • Acknowledgment that color is a complex topic, but understanding how colors interact allows filmmakers to make deliberate choices for visual interest, tension, and mood in films.

This breakdown provides a comprehensive overview of the key concepts discussed in the article about color and its role in film.

Everything You Know About Color Is (Probably) Wrong (2024)
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