Furlong's Elements of Art

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Across
  1. 2. An element of art that is two-dimensional, flat, or limited to height and width.
  2. 4. are any three colors which are side by side on a 12-part color wheel, such as yellow-green, yellow, and yellow-orange. Usually one of the three colors predominates
  3. 8. Colors Yellow-orange, red-orange, red-purple, blue-purple, blue-green & yellow-green. These are the colors formed by mixing a primary and a secondary color. That's why the hue is a two word name, such as blue-green, red-violet, and yellow-orange.
  4. 11. An element of art by which positive and negative areas are defined or a sense of depth achieved in a work of art.
  5. 12. The intensity or purity of a hue
  6. 13. Colors Green, orange and purple. These are the colors formed by mixing the primary colors.
  7. 15. colors are any two colors which are directly opposite each other, such as red and green and red-purple and yellow-green.
Down
  1. 1. An element of art that refers to the way things feel, or look as if they might feel if touched.
  2. 3. The lightness or darkness of tones or colors. White is the lightest value; black is the darkest. The value halfway between these extremes is called middle gray.
  3. 5. Colors Red, yellow and blue. In traditional color theory (used in paint and pigments), primary colors are the 3 pigment colors that cannot be mixed or formed by any combination of other colors. All other colors are derived from these 3 hues.
  4. 6. An element of art made up of three properties: hue, value, and intensity.
  5. 7. Quality of brightness and purity (high makes a color is strong and bright; low makes a color is faint and dull).
  6. 9. Another name for color
  7. 10. An element of art defined by a point moving in space; may be two-or three-dimensional, descriptive, implied, or abstract.
  8. 14. An element of art that is three-dimensional and encloses volume; includes height, width AND depth (as in a cube, a sphere, a pyramid, or a cylinder). May also be free flowing.