a tale of two colors (color, demystified)
Thursday, December 8, 2011 at 12:58PM
Yarnista

Why are there no cookies at my house?

Why has this post not written itself? I asked it to more than a week ago. Why are my posts disobedient?

Why did my horsedogs knock over the Christmas tree?

Why does it get dark at noon?

Who came up with the idea to mix ground meat together with breadcrumbs and eggs, form it into a loaf shape and bake it? Were they burned at the stake?

I suppose I could look up the answers to most of those questions. But I could also be talking to you about colors. And my guess is that you're not really here for my scintillating meatloaf commentary.

(I really do hate it, by the way.)

This is supposed to be part four of my Color, Demystified series. We've already tackled the most difficult color combinations, the complementary pairings of blue and orange, red and green, and purple and yellow.

Let's move on to some analogous color pairings.

Complementary colors are colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel. Analogous colors are next to each other on the color wheel. So, red and purple.  Orange and yellow.

And some of my personal favorites: blue and green.

If my experience holds true, this is also one of your favorite color combinations, as some of our best selling colorways use blue and green together.

And really, it's no wonder given that such a large portion of our natural environment is one or both of these colors.

Heck, from space, the earth itself is blue and green.

Here's the good news: with analogous color groupings, there are no rules. Everything looks good together. It really becomes more about the feeling you want to create in your clothes, your home, your knitting, your design work.

On its own, blues are seen as serene, dependable, clean, and restful. At the lighter end of the spectrum, they can be icy. In the midtones (like turquoise), they are energetic and tropical. As blue deepens, it gets more serious.

Men in suits wear navy. Deep blues are conservative, confident, and authoritative.

Green is a neutral color. Look at nature if you don't believe me. Nature puts green with everything.

Which means, guess what? that all blues go with all greens.

You can't do it wrong! How often has someone said that to you?

Like, almost never, right?

Guess what? You cannot do blue and green wrong.

Liberating.

So here are some of my favorite blue and green pairings. Use them, don't use them. You can't do it wrong.

1. Aqua + Bright Green

How adorable are these socks? The pop of color at the heels and toes make them special.

I like the teal and turquoise with the chartreuse and kelly here. What a bold look for an interior space!

The combination of aqua and bright green is energetic. It feels like new growth, like spring, like the tender buds unfurling from the trees against the morning sky.

Here, it's paired with hints of mustard, which is an analogous color to green.

2. Navy + Kelly

Deep blue and bright green is preppy, classic, timeless, and clean. It looks equally good on men and women.

Oh, look. Erin Bradley thinks so too.

This is an interesting take on a nursery. Cool white, deep navy, and pops of aqua and kelly green.

Navy and kelly have enough contrast to make a print (or colorwork) stand out, but not so much that the pairing becomes garish. This color combo would be a safe choice if you're knitting something as a gift.


3. Blue + Green + Brown

I really love mixing blue and green with brown. Like, a lot.

A lot a lot.

A lot a lot a lot.

The bright green scarf is what kicks this outfit up a notch. And the awesome boots and bag are certainly not hurting matters.

The grouping of blue, green, and brown is earthy but elegant, and quietly eye catching. It's not the flashiest combo in the box. But it's one that can fit into almost any context.


4. Olive + Teal

If you're looking for a hipper alternative to navy and kelly, try teal and olive. This combination is all over, oh, hmm, everything right now.

Home decor. Fashion. Event planning.

Olive and teal has a retro feeling that's popular today. It's just enough late 1970s/early 1980s to seem fresh again.

I'm seeing teal and olive paired with grays, which gives it more sophistication.

Another reason this combination is popular is that in its more muted forms, teal and olive have an heirloom, natural feel.


5. Blue + Green + Purple

Purple and blue are also analogous colors, which means that the combination of blue, green, and purple is a natural one.

Any time you add purple to a color combination, you up the wow-factor. Purple is mysterious and intriguing, and I'm in love with what it does to blue and green.

I love violet with teal, lime, and brown.

And oh, how I love magenta with lime and turquoise. And brown. I have said before that I could spend the rest of my life inventing colorways that have blue, green, purple, and brown in them.

I've created a Pinterest board dedicated to blue and green. You don't need an account to see it, so click here. If you want to join Pinterest (which you do, it's super awesome), you can use the contact button in the upper right, leave me your email address, and I'll send you an invite.

Let's recap what we've learned today:

1. There is no wrong way to do blue and green.

2. The person who invented meatloaf should have been burned at the stake. I'm going to google and see if, in fact, they were.

3. Which shades of blue and green you use together is all about the feeling you want to create.

4. Blue and green can be both timeless and trendy.

5. There are still no cookies at my house.

Thank you. And goodnight.


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