claim
active
claim:the-actual-colors-must-be-worked-out-in-the-place-itself-under-the-influence-of-nearby-and-surrounding-color-and-lightThe actual colors must be worked out in the place itself, under the influence of nearby and surrounding color and light.
Practical principle that color decisions cannot be made on paper or in a store; they require on-site unfolding.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Findings (3)
finding
- After testing, including the owner's preferred milky blue, a surprising dark red created harmony and a comfortable natural feeling.
- Among several gouache color tests on photos, the intense dark blue had the most life; initially rejected by owner, later accepted.
- Experiments showed blue looked artificial; yellow had good interaction with white, and a pale bluish green completed the harmony.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- The exact color proportions were crucial; even minor changes would destroy the inner lightclaim0.794Once the 57:40:3 combination was discovered, it hinged on absolutely correct proportion; any deviation ruined the feeling.
- The color property that color pairs (often complementary) interact to generate a flash of light, making each other shine; extends to three or more colors summing to a luminous whole.
- Foundational assertion about the role of color in wholeness.