finding
active
finding:color-proportion-57-middle-red-40-very-pale-yellow-3-strong-blue-yielded-freshness-and-spring-like-quality-for-martinez-floorColor proportion 57% middle red, 40% very pale yellow, 3% strong blue yielded freshness and spring-like quality for Martinez floor
After sliding paper swatches, the exact proportions that made the balance just right were discovered; any deviation destroyed the inner light.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Claims (2)
claim
- The process of getting the ornament from the space works by structure-preserving transformationssupportsThe design of the floor, color, and geometry all arose as a result of structure-enhancing transformations in the place.
- Once the 57:40:3 combination was discovered, it hinged on absolutely correct proportion; any deviation ruined the feeling.
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.
- Through stick and mockup testing, these dimensions gave the best fit in the room's feeling.
- Alternation of squares and rectangles was superior to simple checkerboard for Martinez floorfinding0.759In pattern trials, alternating square and rectangular elements felt more harmonious than a plain checkerboard.
- During lattice-strip testing, grid patterns parallel to walls jarred, while diagonal patterns harmonized with that specific room.
- A deeper greenish blue, stronger than sky blue but softer, emerged from imagining color in the Martinez sitefinding0.752Through sitting in the place and visualizing, a greenish blue was felt to create inner light with the dry yellow grass and light blue sky.
- By testing swatches and paper mock-ups, these four colors, in varying proportions, brought the room to life.
- Ideal balance of the four colors for a living neighborhood derived from the model.
- Intense dark blue with green tinge produced the most harmonious color for the Kaiser housefinding0.702Among several gouache color tests on photos, the intense dark blue had the most life; initially rejected by owner, later accepted.
- Reflects on the initial hesitation to use the overwhelming sweet proportion, recognizing it as lack of exposure rather than a flaw.