Thursday, March 10, 2011

More Munsell Color Theory

A version of the Munsell Color System Wheel


The Munsell Color System is quite complicated in its entirety.  Here I am presenting a simplified version - only what we as artists and quilters, knitters and weavers need to make lovely color choices.
The painting was done with gouache in an Aquabee 'Super Deluxe' sketchbook.
As I mentioned in my last post, with the Munsell System we have five 'principal colors' (the ones in the squares, above), five 'opposites' in the circles and 'discords'.  A successful composition contains a dominant color (may be a principal or an opposite), the complement of the dominant color and two discords (the third color away from the dominant on each side).  The majority of the composition is the dominant color.  A moderate amount of the complement (more if the color is grayed). And small, equal amounts of the discords.

A drawing using the Munsell System
The dominant color in this drawing is blue. 



Its complement is orange.


Green round, purple swirl - sorry it is fuzzy!


The discords are green and purple.

These drawings were done in a Moleskine sketchbook with a variety of color pencils.  It would be an interesting exercise to do them in the Aquabee sketchbook with gouache and do the color wheel in the Moleskine sketchbook.  Next post, perhaps?

2 comments:

Jaye said...

Would you explain a little more about dischords? Thanks.

Susan said...

I think I am having a semantics problem... Dischord sounds like discord so I think "not in harmony" or "clashing/disonant".

But to me the green dot and purple swirl don't clash with the blue.

I need to develop a new vocabulary.

I like the color wheel.

Mrs. K