TSV

Color Theory - TSV

Color theory is a theoretical framework based on the three attributes of color (hue, value, and saturation), using the color wheel to understand color relationships and create effective color schemes. It is widely applied in design, fine arts, fashion, and interior design, providing techniques to create visual harmony and contrast through color schemes such as complementary, analogous, and triadic colors.

color theory color wheel complementary colors analogous colors three attributes of color color scheme design art
code	slug	name	description	category
01	hue	Hue	The attribute representing the type of color such as red, yellow, and blue.	Three Attributes of Color
02	saturation	Saturation	The attribute representing the vividness or intensity of a color.	Three Attributes of Color
03	value	Value	The attribute representing the lightness or darkness of a color.	Three Attributes of Color
04	color-wheel	Color Wheel	A circular diagram showing the relationships between colors.	Color Theory
05	complementary-colors	Complementary Colors	Color pairs positioned opposite each other on the color wheel.	Color Scheme
06	analogous-colors	Analogous Colors	Colors that are adjacent to each other on the color wheel.	Color Scheme
07	triadic-colors	Triadic Colors	Three colors equally spaced around the color wheel.	Color Scheme
08	split-complementary	Split-Complementary	A color scheme combining one color with the two colors adjacent to its complement.	Color Scheme
09	monochromatic	Monochromatic	A color scheme using variations in value and saturation of a single hue.	Color Scheme
10	color-solid	Color Solid	A three-dimensional representation of the three attributes of color.	Color Theory