What Colour Combination Should You Use In Your Website And How It Will Help Your Visitors In The Long RunWeb Design Colour Scheme
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by John Teh July 21, 2006
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To some people, the more colourful it is the merrier it is. However,
in a more general definition of a well balanced website appearance, it
is not always the case. Words such as nice, wow or beautiful can be
very subjective when it comes to evaluating the appearance of a
particular website. For some, a colourful, flashy and bright website
can be appealing while a darker theme could be better for others. So
the main question now is - how do you go about choosing the right
colours for your website? The biggest and most widely practised
concept of web colour implementation is the RYB approach. Being the
main three colours, Red (R), Yellow (Y) and Blue (B), hence RYB, these
3 colours are known to have a great impact on how web visitors react
and interpret messages on your webpages. You'll realize that most of
the links on the web are underlined in a default blue. Error messages
are usually in red. Yellow provides a nice light addition which
compliments dark backgrounds really well. Orange (red + yellow) texts
for example is extremely popular with black backgrounds. Try it and you
know why. Take a look at www.microsoft.com
for example. It has an excellent application of the primary and
secondary colours together with the support of black and white. Apply
this technique to your web designs and you'll improve the overall
layout appearance significantly, if not greatly. Different
classification of websites require different approach. In most cases,
you don't want to have a corporate website with a black or any
extremely dark background. Apparently a white background seems to
signify formality and a certain level of layout cleanliness. Not that a
dark background can't have a clean cut look, it is just a typical
mental translation of human observation that the colour white is in
fact the cleaner one or simply easier on the eyes. Black background in
the other hand, frequently portrays something which is fancy, elegant,
playful yet has a reasonable level of seriousness in it. A
majority of designers or rather webpage creators believe the role of
emphasization by utilizing light and dark colours. For example, a dark
background combined with a light content area, simply attracts visitors
to emphasize more in the middle, which happens to be the content area.
It simple works too if you have a light coloured background with a dark
content area. Alternatively you can add patterns or images into the
background to spice things up. Just don't get these additional items to
change the original apperance of your colours. The only issue with
background with exceptionally large images is that it might kill some
of the attention that you want your visitors to have on your main
content. There's nothing wrong with having a website with
either a light or dark background, provided that it looks good, and of
course if it is nicely presented together with a readable content with
a friendly user interface. How do you know if it looks good is simply
something that can't be measured by words, but rather by simply looking
at it. If you look at it and by some spontaneous self agreement, that
you think the colour fits perfectly with everything else, then you've
hit the big jackpot. If it works otherwise, and you just feel like
there's something wrong, play around with the colours till you have
that comforting feeling that you've done a great job. You might
be thinking right now, which colour goes with which colour? You can
either browse all over the net, looking at websites and noting down
good combination of colours as you go or you can simply go to http://www.colormatch.dk.
This website is extremely simple and easy to use, yet very powerful in
terms of features. Simple and straightforward, you simply choose one
dominant colour for your website and it'll simply chooses for you 6
other colours which compliments your main colour, together with the
colour codes. Simple as 1-2-3. Note that colormatch.dk only works in
Internet Explorer browsers. Try googling for colormatch and get
enhanced and modified versions of the original. Additionally,
always try not to get your website too dark or too bright. You can use
either one or both of them at the same time, but not too excessively,
and try to find a supporting colour which compliments or enhances your
initial choice. Try to balance up usage of colour tones all over your
website too. If you think that the upper right of your website is too
bright compared to the rest of your page, then either you reduce the
brightness to equal the overall layout or simply brighten up the rest
of the website, in a controlled manner of course. If you're
adventurous, replicate that bright top right area to the bottom right
area, making the right area somewhat a "bright coloured zone". The key
point here is to maintain the balance of your colour usage. You don't
want to drive a car with one of the door being slightly and yet
obviously darker or lighter. Lastly but not least, try to limit
the number of colours to a reasonable amount. 2 to 4 are good amount of
colours, not counting black and white. Black and white are just simply
too important to not to be used. If you really need to use extra
colours, try to use a darker or lighter version of your main colours.
If your main colour is red, wine red, crimson or even maroon are good
alternatives. Even certain tone of brown could actually look like red
sometimes. Try to "recolour" your graphics or get some graphics which
tally with your overall selection of colours. Another good
concept to follow is to apply a colour scheme according to your logo.
If you logo has orange and black for example, try to enhance that
colour by applying those same colours as well as the same colours with
different tones throughout your whole website. Some designers even
select their colours based on the pre selected images they have for
their website. Certain images are just tend to be too exceptionally
perfect to be omitted, thus explaining such occurrences. I hope
this guide will help you to get your colours right and have a better
understanding of what to choose and what not to do in any of your
future web design works. Nevertheless, try not to limit your creativity
and imagination based solely on this article. Get your ideas flowing
and experiment with your ideas constantly. Good luck! |