Amy Matthew David, that is a wonderful color. Pink is great. I think a pink tint video could be made- I would add 7 more color and create a 'how to create pastels' video. Will consider it for future video.
Thanks for the video as I'm learning about colour theory but this video is a bit confusing because isn't shade for black & hue, tint for white & hue and tone for grey (mixture of black & white) & the hue? Hence, @ 1:50 you've not created tones but tints and shades as the white and black are to be mixed together to create grey, then added to the hue to create tone so I'm afraid it's not accurate-sorry. Also water isn't white hence not giving a true representation of the tint outcomes Also @2:05 you said primary colours are primary colours because no other colours can be mixed "with them" which isn't accurate because you mix other colours with them to get secondary colours however, no other colours can be mixed to get primary colours! just friendly constructive criticism from what I've learned from other sources. 🤓
Pyxelles ~ Hello! Thank you your comment, and I am very happy to share and talk over what you mentioned. First off, I should let you know that I am college professor, and teach design. And I would like to answer your questions and comments accurately. Question: I have to ask are you learning design now and are in design school? I need to address that Color Theory is a complex subject matter to study; and many dissertations have been written on it. I hope I can shed some light on this, and share with you a more clearer ideology to the complexity here. If you are learning about Color Theory in school, let's review. What is a hue: a discernible color, such as red, orange, yellow, etc. What is a shade: Any hue, plus black. What is a tint: Any hue, plus white. What is tone: A soften, or reduction in intensity in a hue. At 2:05, Yes, I do say 'no other colors can be mixed with them'. That means they are in their purest form. Your observation of 'mixing' primary colors to get secondary colors is correct. What maybe a cause of confusion here, is these are colors in water used in classrooms to show instant color mixing. I am thinking, if I had recreated this explanation using acrylic paints or oils, it may have been easily to observe, since I would have had to of used white paint and black paint. I really enjoyed the and no pun intended, 'tone' as which you mentioned ' just friendly constructive criticism' which is very welcomed here, always. Prof. M
Can you make a video that makes a pink tint?
Amy Matthew David, that is a wonderful color. Pink is great. I think a pink tint video could be made- I would add 7 more color and create a 'how to create pastels' video. Will consider it for future video.
Thanks for the video as I'm learning about colour theory but this video is a bit confusing because isn't shade for black & hue, tint for white & hue and tone for grey (mixture of black & white) & the hue? Hence, @ 1:50 you've not created tones but tints and shades as the white and black are to be mixed together to create grey, then added to the hue to create tone so I'm afraid it's not accurate-sorry. Also water isn't white hence not giving a true representation of the tint outcomes
Also @2:05 you said primary colours are primary colours because no other colours can be mixed "with them" which isn't accurate because you mix other colours with them to get secondary colours however, no other colours can be mixed to get primary colours! just friendly constructive criticism from what I've learned from other sources. 🤓
Pyxelles ~ Hello! Thank you your comment, and I am very happy to share and talk over what you mentioned. First off, I should let you know that I am college professor, and teach design. And I would like to answer your questions and comments accurately. Question: I have to ask are you learning design now and are in design school? I need to address that Color Theory is a complex subject matter to study; and many dissertations have been written on it. I hope I can shed some light on this, and share with you a more clearer ideology to the complexity here. If you are learning about Color Theory in school, let's review. What is a hue: a discernible color, such as red, orange, yellow, etc. What is a shade: Any hue, plus black. What is a tint: Any hue, plus white. What is tone: A soften, or reduction in intensity in a hue. At 2:05, Yes, I do say 'no other colors can be mixed with them'. That means they are in their purest form. Your observation of 'mixing' primary colors to get secondary colors is correct. What maybe a cause of confusion here, is these are colors in water used in classrooms to show instant color mixing. I am thinking, if I had recreated this explanation using acrylic paints or oils, it may have been easily to observe, since I would have had to of used white paint and black paint. I really enjoyed the and no pun intended, 'tone' as which you mentioned ' just friendly constructive criticism' which is very welcomed here, always. Prof. M
So the hue is temperature? And tint is like a color filter?
Seek3n- Hue means color, and a tint is a variety of a color using white. A shade is when black is added.
@@pingandkvam thanks
I'm confused. You said a tone is 50 percent white OR gray. Didn't you mean to say 50 percent white AND gray? Thanks in advance
AllCarsUnited- In Color Theory, a tone is any pure Hue with Neutral Gray added.