Across
- 2. An element of art that is two-dimensional, flat, or limited to height and width.
- 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
- 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.
- 11. An element of art by which positive and negative areas are defined or a sense of depth achieved in a work of art.
- 12. The intensity or purity of a hue
- 13. Colors Green, orange and purple. These are the colors formed by mixing the primary colors.
- 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. An element of art that refers to the way things feel, or look as if they might feel if touched.
- 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.
- 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.
- 6. An element of art made up of three properties: hue, value, and intensity.
- 7. Quality of brightness and purity (high makes a color is strong and bright; low makes a color is faint and dull).
- 9. Another name for color
- 10. An element of art defined by a point moving in space; may be two-or three-dimensional, descriptive, implied, or abstract.
- 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.