@katherinepagewavess: Proud that I even filmed this. #wavyhairroutine #hairtutorial #wavycurly

Katherine • Wavy Hair Care 🌊
Katherine • Wavy Hair Care 🌊
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Sunday 02 February 2025 02:47:49 GMT
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alexis_curlyq
alexis_curlyQ :
I have never related to anything more LOL beautiful results! Take care curl friend ❤️
2025-02-02 12:47:32
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Replying to @fightclubbarbie There’s a bunch of information I left out in the video, so let me fill in a few of the gaps: First of all, what is colour theory?  Colour theory is basically a bunch of practical information that acts as a guideline for how to mix colours. It also tells us about the effects certain colour combinations can create. (Like how complimentary colours can give you vibrant shadows!) What is a colour wheel? The most important tool in colour theory is the colour wheel, which you can think of as a rainbow arranged in a circle. The colour wheel I drew for this video is pretty simple and only has primary colours (red, blue, & yellow) and secondary colours (purple, orange, & green).  More detailed colour wheels will show the colours in between (for example, yellow-green between yellow and green). These are known as tertiary colours.  Why do complimentary colours make brown when mixed? When you mix all of the primary colours together, you get brown. Complimentary colours (at least in this simple colour wheel) use one primary colour and one secondary colour. Since the secondary colour is made out of two primary colours, mixing a primary and secondary colour is really like mixing 3 primary colours.  Example: Yellow + blue + red = brown Yellow + purple (blue + red) = brown Key takeaways for colour theory/complimentary colours: - The best way to get better at colour theory is just to try new colour combinations. Every artist who understands colour theory has practiced and experimented a lot. Colour theory is something you can learn, not something anyone is born knowing!  - These colour tips are not specific to coloured pencils. You can use colour theory with ANY medium (including any paint, digital art, markers, etc.). - Colour theory isn’t a bunch of hard rules but, instead, is about guidelines. That being said, it’s important to know the rules so you know when/why/how to break them. I’ll be talking about this more in the next video!  If you made it this far, thanks for reading, watching and learning! :)  #art #drawing #coloredpencil #arttips #drawingtips #colortheory #complementarycolors #howtodraw #arttipsforbeginners #colorpicking #artlesson
Replying to @fightclubbarbie There’s a bunch of information I left out in the video, so let me fill in a few of the gaps: First of all, what is colour theory? Colour theory is basically a bunch of practical information that acts as a guideline for how to mix colours. It also tells us about the effects certain colour combinations can create. (Like how complimentary colours can give you vibrant shadows!) What is a colour wheel? The most important tool in colour theory is the colour wheel, which you can think of as a rainbow arranged in a circle. The colour wheel I drew for this video is pretty simple and only has primary colours (red, blue, & yellow) and secondary colours (purple, orange, & green). More detailed colour wheels will show the colours in between (for example, yellow-green between yellow and green). These are known as tertiary colours. Why do complimentary colours make brown when mixed? When you mix all of the primary colours together, you get brown. Complimentary colours (at least in this simple colour wheel) use one primary colour and one secondary colour. Since the secondary colour is made out of two primary colours, mixing a primary and secondary colour is really like mixing 3 primary colours. Example: Yellow + blue + red = brown Yellow + purple (blue + red) = brown Key takeaways for colour theory/complimentary colours: - The best way to get better at colour theory is just to try new colour combinations. Every artist who understands colour theory has practiced and experimented a lot. Colour theory is something you can learn, not something anyone is born knowing! - These colour tips are not specific to coloured pencils. You can use colour theory with ANY medium (including any paint, digital art, markers, etc.). - Colour theory isn’t a bunch of hard rules but, instead, is about guidelines. That being said, it’s important to know the rules so you know when/why/how to break them. I’ll be talking about this more in the next video! If you made it this far, thanks for reading, watching and learning! :) #art #drawing #coloredpencil #arttips #drawingtips #colortheory #complementarycolors #howtodraw #arttipsforbeginners #colorpicking #artlesson

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