The primary colours consists of these three colours?
What is Red, blue, and yellow?
A painting technique which utilizes a small amount of paint to create texture.
What is dry brushing?
This Scientist developed the theory Optiks.
Who is Sir Issac Newton?
The form of energy that allows us to see.
What is Light?
Red and blue create this colour on the light colour wheel.
What is Magenta?
To colours opposite on the colour wheel.
What are complementary colours?
This painting technqiue consists of adding a layer of these tiny rocks.
What is sand textured paintings?
The tool Sir Issac Newton used to split the white light into spectral Colours?
What is a Triangular Glass Prism?
The structure in the eye which focuses light to the retina
What is the lens?
The process of shining spectral colours into a triangular glass prism to produce white light.
Three or more colours side by side on the colour wheel.
What is an analogous colour palette?
What is impasto?
DAILY DOUBLE!!! Wahoo! :D
The Spectral Colours consists of these 7 colours.
What is red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet?
These cells are responsible for night time vision.
What are rod cells?
This is the shortest wavelength on the colour spectrum.
What is violet?
What are tertiary colours?
This term refers to to a solid colour you can not see through.
What is opaque?
The process Sir Issac Newton used to bend light.
What is Diffraction?
The cone and rod cells send light information into this structure in the eye. It connects the eye to the brain.
What is the optic nerve?
The brightness of dullness of colour.
What is intensity?
A palette which consists of variations in grey, white, and black.
What is achromatic colour palette?
A painting technique frequently used in George Seurat's paintings?
What is Pointillism?
This wavelength is the longest on the colour spectrum.
What is red light?
Humans typically see through these 3 types of Cone cells!
what is red, blue, and green?
A type of painting created on a wall or ceiling.
What is a secco painting?