Tuesday, 9 June 2015

Yellow



YELLOW
Good for sharing factual information, promoting conversation, sociability, family harmony 

Joy, happiness, intellect, energy, inspiration

When asked to look at being happy or angry and then attributing a colour to it, Yellow was automatically the colour for happy, Red for anger.  The child was about 6 at the time.  A purely instinctive reaction, from the heart.




‘There are painters who transform the sun to a yellow spot but there are others who, with the help of their art and their intelligence, transform a yellow spot into sun’ – Pablo Picasso








It’s a colour recognised to be good for harmony – is that why we love primroses and daffodils so much in the spring?  Energy and inspiration abounds when the newness of spring approaches and I can feel it as I sit looking out to sea with the sun shining down on the golden sands.  One of my favourite memories is stopping by a field in Tuscany and absorbing the sunshine and warm energy of the sunflower fields.  Sunflowers adorn our walls and a stained glass window adds interest to the view of the neighbours’ wall!






I once heard statistics from car insurance companies that stated yellow cars were less likely to be involved in Road Traffic Incidents.  The implication was that the high visibility was effective in raising attention and thus ensuring people kept a safer distance.  Never having been a lover of yellow and particularly not yellow cars, I did wonder whether this was more to do with the distinct lack of yellow cars on the road, I can’t see any in the car park! The bright and reflective nature of high visibility clothing certainly ensures that many people are kept safer in potentially dangerous environments.

And yet, while every season has a yellow, like orange, it is another colour which is primarily the domain of the warm toned seasons, spring and autumn.  But, unlike orange, each season has a yellow – enjoy yours!  If it’s not a 2* colour, then use it for accents and complementing colour schemes.

Try these combinations for something a bit different:

Spring (warm & clear)
With anything from your palette!
Summer (cool & soft)
Primrose, Coral Red and Hyacinth
Autumn (warm & soft)
Yellow Ochre, Orange and Amber
Winter (cool & clear)
Mole, Stone and Acid Yellow


Returning from the hairdressers where people were admiring the natural blonde highlights that adorn my son’s head when the summer arrives, I recognise that many people want to replicate the blonde hair that adorns so many young heads.  Apparently, it is the change in hormone levels as we get older which causes most of us to lose the blondeness and turn darker.    I recall a very humorous moment when I was in my 20s when someone described me as having dark, curly hair – my program of me says I have blonde, I have the photo to prove it, I was 4!  

I believe everyone is lucky to have their natural colour -  what we need is learn how to choose the clothes, make-up and hair style that will show it off in its best light!  Watch as mousy grey turns to distinguished silver and ‘bleached yellow’ turns a stunning shade of honey beige purely by changing the colours of your clothes and make-up.  It is, however very personal and some are not ready to change - if that’s the case, consider temporary colour to help the transition as mentioned in an earlier blog. 

‘Without my Johnson trademark mop of yellow hair, I think I would be nothing’ – Rachel Johnson

© Tatler

It’s clearly an emotive colour, I’d love to be a fly on the wall as they get into the nitty gritty of what shade of ‘pastel’ this yellow house needs to be repainted! 

And on a practical note, thanks to a school t-shirt, I’ve learnt that yellow needs to be washed with whites to avoid it absorbing all the colours in the wash and turning grey.  
  
Your Yellows range from:
Strong to:
Light / Bright
Spring (warm & clear)
Daffodil, lemon
Lemon
Summer (cool & soft)
Primrose
Autumn (warm & soft)
Old Gold,
Yellow Ochre
Winter (cool & clear)
Acid Yellow
Ice Lemon

As for lipsticks?  If in doubt, wear your red but if you aren’t wearing any point of red with your yellows, your favourite colour will harmonise well. 



Monday, 1 June 2015

Orange


ORANGE
A prime communication and meditation colour
Joy, enthusiasm, happiness, creativity, attraction, success, stimulation






Orange – a good colour for restaurants where happiness and joy in communication are fundamental to an enjoyable experience of eating out with family, friends and colleagues! Maybe this is why I feel it’s strongly associated with Retro. For communication and stimulation it appears it’s a highly appropriate choice that my colleague made on the flip charts we’ve been working on as we look at the long term future of the business. 










And while Frank Sinatra feels it is the happiest colour, it is a colour (as a Summer) that I struggle with - it’s not in my palette - the closest being Musk Pink, and, as a strong colour, has a strong reaction for me in my environment, to the extent that when I moved to a new house I needed to pull up all the marigolds in the garden and replace them with cyclamen and grape hyacinths!  Not so effective on bug control but easier on my eye!







An earlier blog I wrote connecting the colour of your mug to the flavour of your hot chocolate reported that Orange mugs produce the best tasting hot chocolate.  No mention was made regarding the research sample as to what season each of the tasters was and thus how much unconscious personal preference may have played a part!

And so I sit down with my purple mug (there wasn’t an orange one!) and consider the virtues of Orange every colour has its place and contribution to the rainbow:

‘There is no blue without yellow and without orange’ – Vincent Van Gogh

In its rightful place, it looks stunning and when I passed a colleague last week wearing an orange top, matching lipstick and a Kingfisher Poncho, I was reminded of the joys of wearing colours appropriately (to the wearer) and in complementary harmony with each other.  It was as if the light had been switched on and she was illuminated.  The hair colour, cut, make-up, trousers and boots served to support the strength of the picture frame and she was ‘In Focus’.

‘If the family were a fruit, it would be an orange, a circle of sections, held together but separable – each segment distinct’ – Letty Cottin Pogrebin

The thirst-quenching fresh flavour of a fresh orange presse.
The burst of zest when my finger nail first breaks the skin of an orange or tangerine.
The juicy calmness I experience from the ripest, juiciest mango.
The warming mellow as orange merges towards rust with its comforting homeliness in soft furnishings.

Orange, as a bright, can make a fantastic accent colour – Men, if you’re an Autumn or a Spring, try it in a tie; you might be surprised at how appropriately impactful it can be when balanced with your trousers/suit/shirt combinations.  Particularly stunning against a dark brown, chocolate combination.

Ideas for introducing Orange:
Spring (warm & clear)
Aquas, Turquoises and all the neutrals – navy, browns through tan to cream etc
Summer (cool & soft)
Somewhere you can look at and enjoy it!
Autumn (warm & soft)
With Royal Purple, Apricot, Amber, Rust, and with all your Greens, browns and navy
Winter (cool & clear)
Somewhere you can look at and enjoy it!

And if Orange in its purist form is a bit strong, Autumns can soften it by moving to Amber or Rust while Springs can introduce the lighter Tangerine moving into Salmon or the stronger, deeper Terracotta.

Your Orange lipsticks range from:
Strong to:
Light / Bright
Spring (warm & clear)
Terracotta
Tangerine
Summer (cool & soft)
Musk Pink is the closest but it’s not really there!
Autumn (warm & soft)
Orange, Rust, Amber,

Winter (cool & clear)
Scarlet is the closest, but it’s not really there!

Great Oranges for your Season
Soft
Clear
Warm
Autumn L308, L621, L648, L653
Spring  L308, L410




You can wear any colour – of course you can, but they don’t all suit you or make you look your best.  If you want to embrace the colour of orange in your life, maybe it’s about knowing it’s there rather than showing it to the world; a piece of orange fabric, orange underwear, a picture of wonderful things that are orange.  

I love pictures, photos and imagery – maybe I’ll try that!  Put it where I can look at it, rather than putting it on me and making other people look at it.   Remember, I make the colour look good (or not) as much as the colour makes me look good (or not)!