Color is probably the most potent device available to artists, both amateurs and professionals. This is true of interior decorators and designers as well. Color influences shape, weight, size and temperature. It also is expressive in that color carries symbolism and emotion.For example, we've been conditioned to respond to pink as a baby girl's color while blue is often reserved for the boy. Yellow and white have traditionally been non-gender colors for infants. Why? Who knows.Girls instinctively like blue-based colors while boys have to be trained to like blue-based colors. It takes a sophisticated, well-educated man to prefer colors that are undetectably tinted with blue rather than their instinctive preference of colors that are yellow-based. So why do baby girls get pink instead of the preferred blue? The answer is still "Who knows?" And yellow is the worst color for a baby's room because it has been proven that an infant will fuss and cry more in a yellow room than in a room of any other color.Even in conversation, color is used for emphasis. "Green with envy" is a descriptive phrase, yet trees are green and no envy is shown there. When someone is described as having a "yellow streak" it means cowardice, yet there's nothing wimpish about a golden-yellow sunset. There seems to be no natural basis from which these sayings took their origin, yet we all understand what is meant when someone "sings the blues."What about the experts who come up with odd ideas? Wassily Kandinsky, for instance, was a teacher and painter at the famous Bauhaus school of architecture and design. He proposed that yellow was akin to the shape of a triangle, red to the shape of a square and blue was symbolic of a circle. Do those color ideas fit in your pegs?Salvador Dali, in his surrealistic paintings, established that color and form could stand outside reality and be extraordinary, even rambunctious. His biting purples, parrot blues, emerald greens and golden yellows were part of the magnetism of his art.The point is, color has many faces. Some of our connotations and feelings for colors come from training, lifestyles and heritage. But when it comes right down to it, the beauty of a color is truly in the eye of the beholder.(Rosemary Sadez Friedmann, an interior designer in Naples, Fla., is the author of an award-winning book, "Mystery of Color," as seen on HGTV. For design inquiries, write to Rosemary at DsgnQuest(at)aol.com.)
Latest Stories
By DAVID MOULTON, Scripps Howard News Service
By JOSE de la ISLA, Hispanic Link News Service
By DAN WALTERS, Sacramento Bee
By BABE WAXPAK, Scripps Howard News Service
By DAVE BOLING, Tacoma News Tribune
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By AIDIN VAZIRI, San Francisco Chronicle
By TERRY MATTINGLY, Scripps Howard News Service
By DAVID YOUNT, Scripps Howard News Service
By GREGORY K. FRITZ, The Providence Journal
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
By MIKE HARRIS, Scripps Howard News Service
By MARTIN SCHRAM, Scripps Howard News Service
By LAVINIA RODRIGUEZ, Tampa Bay Times
By JAY AMBROSE, Scripps Howard News Service
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By POHLA SMITH, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
- 1 of 2396
- ››
Color has many meanings
Submitted by SHNS on Mon, 07/14/2008 - 12:44
Paying taxes unites us. It also divides us. People can pay five and even six times more in state and local taxes than other folks in similar circumstances making similar incomes.
Who's got your number?
In one of the fastest-growing forms of identity theft, crooks are stealing tax refunds by swiping personal information and using it to trick the Internal Revenue Service.




ShareThis






Salvador Dali
Sounds like you are referring to the painting "Endless Enigma". Hidden imagery, the use of purple works well in the image.