This
year I am teaching high school art. On this page you will find some
of the resources that I have made for the color portion of the art
course. While it is true that the student could and probably should
draw these shapes to paint sometimes there simply isn't enough time
and that is where these printables come in.
Best wishes to you and have fun teaching color theory. :-)
Supplies
- quality mixable paint in these colors: white, black, red, blue, and yellow
- paint brushes in various sizes
- paint mixing trays, water, paper towels and a protected surface for working
- paper that is paint friendly
- artist apron for each child (optional)
Color Terms:
Hue: Pure color
without the addition of black, white, or gray
Tint: Color with
white added.
Tone: Color with
gray or its complement added.
Value: The
relative darkness or lightness of a color.
Intensity:
The strength of a color, especially the degree to which it lacks its
complementary color.
Saturation:
Vividness of hue; degree of difference from a gray of the same
lightness or brightness.
Achromatic:
Designating color perceived to have zero saturation and therefore no
hue, such as neutral grays, white, or black.
The printables and a brief explanation of each one
Color Wheels
Although a child should try to draw this
themselves, I decided to make a printable anyway in case of limited
class time. It is preferred that the child use only the 3 primary
colors: red, yellow, and blue to paint the color wheel. The child
should learn to mix the colors to get the other needed colors. |
![]() Ives Color Wheel This color wheel has various sized circles which makes color placement a little easier for beginners. |
![]() Ives Color Wheel This color wheel is the pie type, there are no indicators of where colors go. |
Color Wheel Terms
Primary Colors: Colors at their basic essence; those colors that cannot be created by mixing others... red, blue, yellow |
Secondary Colors: The colors achieved by a mixture of two primaries... purple, orange, green |
Tertiary Colors: The colors achieved by a mixture of primary and secondary hues.. red-orange, red-purple, blue-purple, blue-green, yellow-green, yellow-orange |
Complementary Colors: The colors located opposite each other on a color wheel. |
Analogous Colors: The colors located close together on a color wheel and have a color in common. |
Mixing and Comparing
Scale Chart I with black lines Scale Chart I with gray lines |
![]() Scale Chart II with black lines Scale Chart II with gray lines |
Comparison Boxes with black lines Comparison Boxes with gray lines |
Color Group Terms
Artists can use color groups for their palette to make a visually
pleasing color scheme.
Triadic Colors: These are the
colors that are evenly spaced on the color wheel.
Primary Triad ![]() |
SecondaryTriad ![]() |
Tertiary Triad ![]() |
Tertiary Triad ![]() |
Split-complementary color schemesSplit complementary is a variation of complementary.
There are 12 possible variations. In the first example below, the 3
colors connected are red, yellow-green, and blue-green. Green is the
complement of red, but in a split complementary color scheme, the
colors adjacent to the complement are used instead of the true
complement. |
Warm Colors
|
Cool Colors
|
| Analogous Colors are any three colors on the color wheel that have a color in common and are adjacent on the color wheel | Complementary Colors are colors that are across from each other on the color wheel | Monochromatic Scheme uses one color and all of the tints, tones, and shades of that color. |









