A practical guide to RYB neutralization and color value.
RYB Neutralizer
Tints & Shades
Color Schemes
Practical Exercises
The Quiz
1. RYB Neutralization Mixer
Explore how traditional **RYB complementary colors** (Red/Green, Yellow/Violet, Blue/Orange) neutralize each other to produce complex, muted tones (grays and browns), essential for shadows and realism.
Red
50% Color 1 / 50% Color 2
Green
Resulting Neutralized Tone
Quick Practice
Deep Shadow Red (R + G)
Mute Cadmium Red with a touch of Pthalo Green to create a rich, realistic shadow color.
Muted Ochre (Y + V)
Neutralize Primary Yellow with Dioxazine Violet for landscape earth tones.
2. Tints, Tones, and Shades (Value)
Controlling the **value** (lightness or darkness) of a color is crucial. This module shows how adding White (for Tints), Black (for Shades), or Gray (for Tones) alters the original **Hue**.
BASE HUE
Base Hue
TINT (+ White)
Lighter Tint
TONE (+ Gray)
Muted Tone
SHADE (+ Black)
Darker Shade
3. Color Schemes (RYB Harmony)
Harmony in painting relies on the **traditional 12-point RYB Color Wheel**. This calculator finds the closest RYB hue to your input color and generates schemes based on traditional RYB principles (Red, Yellow, Blue primaries).
Complementary (High Contrast)
Two colors 180° apart on the color wheel. Creates high-impact, vibrant contrast.
4. Practical Exercises: Putting Theory to Work
Use the tools in the previous tabs to complete these fundamental color challenges, simulating real-world mixing and palette planning.
Exercise 4.1: Creating an Atmospheric Gray
Goal: Mix a rich, dark gray suitable for a winter sky, ensuring it has warmth without being muddy.
Go to the RYB Neutralizer tab (Tab 1).
Set Color 1 to Blue .
Use the ‘Set Color 2 to RYB Complement’ button (this should set Color 2 to Orange).
Adjust the Mixing Ratio slider to 70% Color 1 / 30% Color 2.
Observe: The resulting tone should be a deep, slightly warm slate gray. In painting, this is how you mix chromatic grays using a complement, instead of just black and white.
Exercise 4.2: Establishing a Full Value Range
Goal: Generate the correct tint, tone, and shade for a base color to give a three-dimensional effect (highlight, mid-tone, shadow).
Go to the Tints & Shades tab (Tab 2).
Set the Base Color (Hue) to Red.
Observe the four resulting blocks:
The Tint is your highlight color (Red + White).
The Base Hue is your mid-tone color.
The Shade is your deep shadow color (Red + Black).
Challenge: Change the Base Color to Yellow. Notice how the Tint and Shade change drastically, illustrating Yellow’s naturally high value.
Exercise 4.3: Designing a High-Energy Portrait Palette
Goal: Select a scheme that offers high contrast and energy, perfect for eye-catching design.
Go to the Color Schemes tab (Tab 3).
Set the Base Color to Red-Violet. This is a popular hue for subtle portrait shadows.
Select the ‘Triadic’ scheme type.
Observe: The resulting scheme will be Red-Violet, Yellow-Green, and Blue-Orange. These three colors form a vibrant, high-contrast triangle on the RYB wheel, often used for dynamic compositions.
Variation: Change the scheme type to ‘Analogous’ (Red-Violet, Violet, and Red-Orange) and note how the palette instantly becomes much softer and harmonious.
5. Color Theory Quiz
Test your knowledge on RYB neutralization, value, and color relationships.