Elementary Color
MILTON BRADLEY. Author of Color in the Schoolroom and Color in the Kindergarten.
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY HENRY LEFAVOUR, Ph.D., Professor of Physics, Williams College.
Third Edition.
MILTON BRADLEY CO., SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
Copyrighted, 1895, By MILTON BRADLEY CO., SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
The movement in educational reform at present is in the direction of unification. It is held that in framing the programme for any grade the interest not only of the next higher but of all higher grades must be considered. This is done not solely that those who are to enter the higher grades may be directly prepared for their more advanced studies, but especially because it is felt that better work will thus be done for those whose school training is soon to terminate. For the child's education is never finished and a mind rightly directed at the start will gather from its practical experience that with which it may develop and augment the resources and the ideas already received. No education can be sound which teaches anything that is inconsistent with the more advanced truths, however complex and profound those truths may be. There should be no unlearning in the course of an education nor any expenditure of time on that which has no permanent value.
It is of importance therefore to consider in connection with the study of any special subject what the problems are which lie at the end of the educational journey and what basis will be needed in the child's maturer thought. There will thus be the inspiration of the goal to be attained and guidance in the selection of the most helpful methods.
There is scarcely any subject that has so many practical and scientific aspects as the subject of color. Its great importance in the arts and its contribution to the enjoyment of life are matched by the multiplicity of problems in the physical and philosophical sciences with which it is connected. Without attempting to enumerate all of the scientific problems related to this subject, it may be of interest to briefly summarize those which are most prominent. At the outset we have such purely physical questions as the nature of light, the cause of its emission, the mode of its propagation, the difference in the waves which give rise to the various color sensations, the principles of absorption, of reflection and of refraction, and the nature of material surfaces whereby they acquire their characteristic colors. Then comes the physiology of the eye, including its structure and its function and involving the much discussed questions of primary and secondary colors, and these are closely related to the psychological or psycho-physical study of the nature, duration and delicacy of color vision and color judgment. Next to these comes the study of pigments and of the chromatic effects of their mixture, essentially a chemical and technical question, and finally, the most important of all, the purely psychological or æsthetic problem touching the harmonization and grouping of the various colors and their modifications. The recent advance made in experimental psychology has given an impetus to the study of the whole subject and we may reasonably expect that rational explanations may be found for questions in æsthetics hitherto considered purely arbitrary.
Milton Bradley
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CONTENTS.
INTRODUCTION.
PREFACE.
The Theory of Color.
Why Artists and Scientists Have Disagreed.
The Speculations of the Past.
What the Primary Teacher Needs to Consider.
Concerning the Solar Spectrum.
Fig.1
Six Spectrum Standards of Color.
The Color Wheel and Maxwell Disks.
The Bradley System of Color Instruction.
Color Definitions.
The Color Wheel.
The Color Top.
Use of the Disks.
How to Begin the Experiments.
The Old Theories Tested by Mixture of Three Pigments.
Old Theories Tested by the Color Wheel or Color Top.
Concerning the Complementary Colors.
Citrines.
Russets.
Olives.
Vermilion.
Burnt Sienna.
Raw Sienna.
Indian Red.
Classification of Harmonies.
The Work of Chevreul Reviewed.
Simultaneous Contrast.
Successive Contrast.
Mixed Contrast.
Contrasted Harmony.
Color with White.
Black with White.
Color with Black.
Colors with Gray.
Contrast of Colors.
Dominant Harmonies.
Complementary Harmonies.
Analogous Harmonies.
Perfected Harmonies.
Field's Chromatic Equivalents.
Colored Papers.
Color Teaching in The Schoolroom.
The Glass Prism.
How the Bradley Color Standards Were Chosen.
Paper Color Tablets.
Color Wheel or Top.
The Study of Tones.
Neutral Grays.
Explanation of Broken Colors.
An Exercise in Broken Colors.
Formulas for a Chart of Broken Spectrum Scales.
Certain "Color Puzzles."
Chart of Pure Spectrum Scales Completed.
The Work of Cutting and Pasting.
A Variety of Designs.
Analysis of Color Materials.
The Bradley Colored Papers.
Engine Colored Papers.
Water Colors.
Color Blindness.
Outline of a Course in Color Instruction.
The Solar Spectrum.
Pigmentary Spectrum Colors.
Study of Tones.
Broken Colors.
Complete Chart of Pure Spectrum Scales in Five Tones.
Advanced Study of Harmonies.
Water Colors.
MATERIAL FOR COLOR INSTRUCTION.
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