The Language of Fashion
Across
- 5. This varies with the amount of white or black added to a color.
- 6. A thin person might use these lines to add depth to the frame.
- 12. A shirt pocket helps to divide up this design element.
- 13. This might be created by a bright red belt or hat.
- 14. Another name for color.
- 15. A substance that determines whether you see a rose as yellow or red.
- 16. A comparison of the sizes of different objects, or of different parts of one object.
- 17. A lightened variation of a color.
- 18. A fanning effect of lines flowing out from one point.
- 22. A dramatic, high-contrast, three-color scheme.
- 23. These lines in a design make a person look taller.
- 24. An arrangement that shows how colors are related to each other. (2 words)
- 26. Can be high or low, depending on a color's brightness.
- 27. These lines add a dramatic effect to a design.
- 30. Might be describes as rough, nubby, or silky.
- 31. Formed by the meeting of an area's outer lines.
- 32. Colors that are directly across from each other on a color wheel.
Down
- 1. Colors that give a sense of quiet and calm.
- 2. Created by repetition in a design, with or without gradual chenges.
- 3. A hoop skirt is an extreme example of this basic shape.
- 4. Colors that tend to brighten or add excitement.
- 7. Balance acheived by using different features of roughly equal weight in a design.
- 8. Balance created by using mirror images in a design.
- 9. A color term that describes red, yellow, and blue.
- 10. A combination of a color with black.
- 11. Mixing equal parts yellow and blue creates this type of color.
- 19. Mixing yellow and green produces this type of color.
- 20. An image seen only as an outline.
- 21. The pleasing effect resulting when all parts of a design fit with each other.
- 25. The total effect of all design elements brought together.
- 28. A "noncolor" often used to soften a true color.
- 29. The most elementary of design elements, this divides areas and gives form to a design.