Understanding universal perceptions and color's relationship with us is essential to becoming a great artist or designer. Tetradic color combinations use four colors spaced evenly on the color wheel to form a square or rectangle - examples: Red, yellow-green, light blue, purple magenta, green-yellow, blue-green, and indigo.You can find your three triadic colors by creating a triangle on the color wheel - examples: red, yellow, and blue green, orange, and blue-violet red-orange, yellow-green, and blue-violet.
These combinations tend to be vibrant, creating a dynamic and harmonious visual contrast when combined.
It evokes emotion, influences our perception, inspires responses - conscious or subconscious - and even impacts generational appeal. Color is perhaps the most powerful tool at your disposal as a designer because of its influential and communicative nature.