Design Span Classsearchtermtextsspan a Practical Treatise On Textile D

Cover Design Span Classsearchtermtextsspan a Practical Treatise On Textile D
Design Span Classsearchtermtextsspan a Practical Treatise On Textile D
Fenwick Umpleby
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Regarded from an art point of view there are but three colors — blue, red, and yellow.
2. Blue, red, and 3'ellow have been termed primary colors, as they cannot be formed by the admixture of any other colors.
3. All colors other than blue, red, and yellow result from the admixture of the primary colors.
4. By the admixture of blue and red, violet is formed.
, ,, , red and yellow, orange.
, ,, , yellow and blue, green.
5. Colors resulting from the admixture of two primary colors are termed secon
...dary, hence violet, orange and green are secondary colors.
f). By the admixture of two secondary colors a tertiary color is formed. Thus violet and orange produce russet, the red tertiary; green and violet produce olive, the blue tertiary. Russet, citrine, and olive arc the three tertiary colors.
7. When a light color is juxtaposed to a dark color the light color appears redder than it actually is, and the green greener, and when blue and black are juxtaposed the blue manifests but little alteration, while the black assumes an orange tint or becomes " rusty.


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