The Artist’s Color Wheel

The Artist’s Color Wheel

Author: Alison Hazel   –   Published: January 2022   –   Revised: January 2024

The Artist’s Color Wheel 

The artist’s color wheel is a handy chart or artwork that you can create to help you make sense of color. The artist’s color wheel has three distinct rings, the center ring, the middle ring and the outer ring. 

There are different intensities of color in the different rings in the color wheel with the main color being in the middle ring. To show the primary, secondary and tertiary colors you need twelve segments.

SMIKE

Note: The Artist’s color wheel is different to the printer’s (or process) color wheel which used CMYK  (pronounced “smike”) cyan (C), magenta (M), yellow (Y) and black (K).

Art Supplies I Used 

To make my artist’s color wheel I used the following supplies:

Paper

I used one sheet from my Strathmore cold press watercolor pad.

Paintbrush

My paintbrush is quite old, but here is a similar one number 6 medium watercolor brush.

Paint

If you want to create this exact colour wheel shown here, I made it using my Sakura Koi watercolour paints which have specific color names for the colours. Your paints might have different names for each of the colours. If your paintbox has less colors, you will have to mix more colors to make the secondary and tertiary colors. If your paintbox has more colors, you may be able to take the colors you need straight from the pan.

Pen

I used a permanent Faber Castell 0.3mm Artist Pitt pen in black.

Other Equipment

Staedtler compass with pencil.

Staedtler 360-degree protractor.

4H pencil.

Ruler.

Eraser.

Paint Swatches

When I received this paintbox as a gift from my son-in-law last Christmas, I decided to make a color swatch chart. 

On some watercolor paper, I drew a grid of six columns by four rows to align with each color pan in the box. Next, I created a test color swatch of each paint in the exact position each color is found in the paintbox. By writing the manufacturer’s name of the actual color, as shown on the outer cover that the paints came in, on my swatch card, I can refer to each color by name for instances such as this. I trimmed the paper down, so it fits neatly into the lid of my paintbox.

I use the paint swatch as a guide, because you can’t always see what the colors will be like on the page when they are in the little pans.

Color Categories

3 Primary Colors

Red, yellow and blue are the three primary colors. The primary colors are shown in the center ring of the color wheel. Each of the three primary colours are placed to form a triangle with three segment gaps in between.

In general, the three primary colors cannot be created by mixing other colors.

Red

From my paint box for red I used “Alizarin crimson.”

Blue

For blue I used “ultramarine” and

Yellow

For yellow I chose “permanent yellow deep.”

 

3 Secondary Colors

Secondary colors are created by mixing two primary colors together. Paint the secondary colors between the primary colors by leaving one gap between each primary. 

Violet

Violet is created by combining red and blue and from my paint box I used the color called “purple” (yes, I know). 

Orange

Orange is created by merging red and yellow and from my paintbox I used the color called “permanent orange.” 

Green

Green is created by mixing yellow and blue and from my paintbox I used a color called “yellow green.”

 

6 Tertiary Colors

There are six tertiary colors all of which are nestled between one primary color and one secondary color. Some of these colors I took straight out of the pans in my paintbox and a few I mixed. It depends on how many colors you have in your paintbox whether you can use the color immediately or if you must mix it. 

Vermillion

Vermillion (tangerine) is the tertiary color that lies between red and orange.

Apricot

Aureoline (apricot) is the tertiary color that lies between orange and yellow.

Chartreuse

Chartreuse (lime green) is the tertiary color that lives between yellow and green.

Turquoise

Turquoise is the tertiary color that is between green and blue and from my paintbox I used “cerulean blue.”

Indigo

Indigo is the tertiary color that lies between blue and violet and from my paintbox I mixed ultramarine and purple.

Magenta

Magenta is the tertiary color that lies between violet and red and from my paintbox I mixed cadmium red and purple.

 

Color Names

The color names I have used here to describe the colors in teh color wheel can be replaced by other color names close to the actual color if you like. I like to keep it simple and use names for colors that make sense to me. Also it helps if they are in the Apple color crayon box.

I have told you the color names in my paintbox and you may have colors similar but with different names in yoru paint box. Manufacturers can be different reagarding color names.

Light and Dark

Tints: Outer Ring

Tints are made by combining white with any color. The tints for the primary, secondary and tertiary colors are shown on the outer ring where the colors are becoming progressively lighter.

Technically, and because this is watercolor paint, I just watered down the main color from the middle ring to make a lighter color. I did not add white, as that comes from the paper.

Shades: Inner Ring

Shades are made by adding black to any color. The darker shades are shown in the center ring on this artist’s color wheel. All shades become increasingly darker as black is added.

The shades are displayed as each main inner ring color has a tiny bit of black added to darken and dull down, or mute, the color.

The black I use from my paintbox was called “ivory black.”

Full Blown Color Chart

Ideas for a Bigger Color Wheel

You could create a color wheel with 24 or 48 segments and add all the combinations of color. That I may do one day, but for now I’ll stick to the twelve spoke color wheel that I created. I did enjoy making this color wheel as it helps me to choose colors that I want to use in future paintings.

Aspiring Artist Activity: Color Wheel

What To Do

With a piece of watercolor paper and some watercolor paints please do the following:

  • With a pencil compass, draw three concentric circles with the following radii (distance), 3cm, 5.5cm and 9cm (or 1 inch, 2 ¼ inch and 3 ½ inch).
  • With a circular protractor, divide the wheel into twelve 30-degree segments.
  • With a 0.3mm black waterproof pen, go over the lines.
  • Paint the middle circle with the solid colors, the inner circle with shades (add a little black) and the outer circle with lighter tints thinned with water.
  • If possible, write the name of each color around the wheel as shown.

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Alison Hazel

Author Bio

Alison Hazel is a woman who shares her ongoing journey about becoming an artist later in life. She creates simple art that anyone can make. She hopes to inspire you to reach your creative potential in the area that suits you.

Read more about Alison’s story.

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The Prehistoric Primary Colors

The Prehistoric Primary Colors

The Prehistoric Primary Colors

by Alison Hazel

 

The earliest remaining prehistoric art that early humans created can be seen in the caves at the town of Lascaux in France.





There are other areas in the world with palaeolithic art, but the Lascaux caves are famous for their color, variety and volume of images.

 

 

In this sketch, I tried to recreate the image of the bull and horse from the cave art at Lascaux.

 

 

I used toned paper and the prehistoric primary colors of black, white and red.

I also added some yellow as that was available from burnt umber.

Cave Art

Below is a photo from the caves and you can see the power of the red used.

The early artists made use of the natural bulges, cracks and protuberances of the cave walls to add almost a relief effect to each animal.

 

 

Modern Primary Colors

The modern primary colors are red, yellow and blue.

When mixed in varying degrees you can make all the colors.

Prehistoric Primary Colors

The prehistoric primary colors are commonly known as black, white and red.

The term “Prehistoric Primaries” is one way to express that the early cave painters only had a few natural colors at their disposal.

Limited Palettes

To use a limited palette in art means to only draw or paint with a few colors.

The most limited palette is black and white such as is seen in pen and ink drawings.

 

 

If you add one more color to black and white, such as the cave painters adding red, you can create dynamic images where color is handled carefully to express the meaning of the art piece.

Using a limited palette is a good way to bring focus to your artworks and set the mood for individual paintings.

Your Paint Box

In a beginner’s paintbox of say, twelve colours, there is the tendency to dip into each and every color pan available.

 

 

If you bring some discipline to your color palette you can explore your color techniques and learn a great deal about working with color as you create sophisticated artworks.




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