concept
active
concept:families-of-color

Families of Color

The color property that all colors in a composition share a family resemblance, often achieved by mixing traces of one another, creating hidden similarity (echoes).

Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count

Frameworks (2)

framework
  • The set of eleven empirical properties that cause inner light in color, analogous to the fifteen geometric properties. They include: Hierarchy of Colors, Colors Create Light Together, Contrast of Dark and Light, Mutual Embedding, Boundaries and Hairlines, Sequence of Linked Color Pairs, Families of Color, Color Variation, Intensity and Clarity of Individual Color, Subdued Brilliance, Color Depends on Geometry.
  • A set of color qualities that emerge from the fundamental process, analogous to the fifteen properties; introduced in this chapter and elaborated in Book 4, chapter 7.

Chapters (1)

chapter
  • The chapter from The Nature of Order, Vol. 4, exploring how color, through the phenomenon of inner light, provides a direct glimpse of the I (ground), and presenting the eleven color properties that structure that unity.

Related by similarity (8)

cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edge

Entities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.