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Saturation

Fine arts Salon paintingScarification

Saturation: The greatest possible intensity of the color.
Scumbling: Dragging paint in a broken manner over a previously painted dry surface.
Sketch: 1. A brief statement of the subject. 2. A drawing complete in itself.

 


Saturation A technical term used by artists to describe the degree of purity in a color. This is established by comparing a sample of the color with a
colorless area of equal brightness.

saturation The purity or intensity of a hue (color) on a scale from bright (full saturation) to dull (low saturation).
scale The comparative size of a thing in relation to another like thing or its "normal" or "expected" size.

saturation See intensity.
scale The size or apparent size of an object seen in relation to other objects, people, or its environment or format. Also used to refer to the quality or monumentality found in some objects regardless of their size.

Saturation
The purity or intensity of a hue or color on a scale from bright (full saturation) to dull (low saturation) chromatic purity. The degree of difference from the achromatic light-source color of the same brightness.
Scavo ...

saturation - A color's purity of hue; its intensity. A pure hue has the highest saturation. This is illustrated in the middle ring of the color wheel below. A brilliant color is strongly saturated, and also very light in value.

Saturation
Luminance
Discuss the development of color theory.
Look at the entry on Goethe's Color theories. What aspects do you imagine, appealed to Turner. and which to Monet?

Also see saturation, shade, tint, tone, and value.
intercolumniation - In architecture, the space or the system of spacing between columns in a colonnade.

intensity...The saturation, strength, or purity of color.
intermediate color...A color produced by a mixture of a primary color and a secondary color.
IMPASTO; thick paint applied with brush, palette knife or fingers etc..

intensity - relative saturation or purity of a hue, on a scale from bright (pure) to dull (mixed with another hue); chroma ...

intensity The relative purity or saturation of a hue (color), on a scale from bright (pure) to dull (mixed with another hue or a neutral. Also called chroma.

This term refers to the Hue/Saturation/Intensity of colour variations, encompassing Hue (eg. red versus green), Saturation (eg. deep versus pale), and Intensity or Brightness.

The objects that we see in life play no role here, but that which is the essence of painting itself can be shown here best of all--the combination of color, its saturation, the relation of colored masses, depth, texture.

A color is brilliant when it has both high lightness and strong saturation. When prepared by mixing pigments, a large amout of a hue might be mixed with a small amount of white, but only to the degree that it remains richly hued.

Colors are high in saturation and closely valued. The pictures' flatness is accentuated by the frequently close values. A thin tissue of paint seems to have been rapidly wiped across the canvas.

Chroma:- The purity or degree of saturation of a color; relative absence of white or gray in a color.

intensity. Also called chroma or saturation. It refers to the brightness of a color (a color is full in intensity only when pure and unmixed). Color intensity can be changed by adding black, white, gray, or an opposite color on the color wheel.

The purity and brightness of a colour; The relative saturation of a hue on a scale from bright (pure) to dull (mixed) with another hue or a neutral; also called chroma.
Interior Design
Design for the inside of homes and buildings.

At the same time, the degree of saturation of colors and the overall warmer tones are reminiscent of the Muscovite school.

Chroma
A joint term for the hue and saturation but not the value (dark or light) of color.
Cinquecento
Refers to the sixteenth century, especially in Italian culture.
Citrine
(See YELLOW) ...

The degree of purity or brilliance of a color. Also known as chroma or saturation.
KINETIC ART
Kinetic art is art that incorporates movement as part of its expression - either mechanically, by hand, or by natural forces.

Every color has three aspects to it: hue or name, value or tone, and chroma or saturation. If you're trying to mix a color on your palette to accurately match a color in a subject, you need to consider all of these to get the "color right".

Intensity: Refers to the brightness or dullness of a color; amount of saturation.
Intuitive: Perceived immediately by the mind, instinctive knowledge or feeling.

Neutral color: colors of very low saturation, approaching grays.
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The purity and brightness of a color. Also called saturation. Return to top
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KEY ...

Depth: See sections on Perspective and Colour where the former is concerned. the extent of recession in a painting; where the latter, the extent of a coIour's saturation.

Only pure Azo organic image forming dyes are used.
These dyes yield an image with richer color saturation and more accurate hue rendition.
This product has unexcelled archival stability, offering extremely high fade resistance and life expectancy.

Some terms for these variables are value or tonality (the degree of lightness or darkness) and intensity or saturation (the purity of a color, its brightness or dullness).

See also: Painting, Composition, Movement, Sculpture, Size

Fine arts Salon paintingScarification

 
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