I just finished helping a church select and refine their brand colors, so hues, shades, and swatches are fresh on my mind.
To my amusement, I started having dreams about color palettes.
I’ve been so engrossed in color lately that I figured I would write down some of my process, rationale, and considerations for color selection.
Color is hard because it’s a perceptual thing. There’s no way to know if the blue you see is the same blue I see. Online color blindness tests can only reveal a very general problems, but there’s no way for you to know how certain color sensitivities are affecting your preferences (without more rigorous testing). ß The paradoxical thing about color is that it’s both subjective and objective at the same time. What do I mean?
Well, most of us mortals get frustrated with indecision around color. We piddle and fiddle and can’t fix the nagging feeling that something’s “off.” So how come the greatest painters, designers, and photographers can reliably produce work that everyone agrees has “beautiful” color?
The greats all seem to know the secrets. Many of them have spent decades immersed in the theory and practice of color, so maybe they’ve earned it. I’m sure you don’t want to go to those lengths, (and I haven’t… yet).
So instead I want to distill for you what I have learned about color selection in a church context. The Brand Colors series will take up the next several installments of Tend Your Brand. Stay tuned for those in the coming days.