Volume 5, Issue 1, January 2014, Pages 49–53
Reham Mohsen1 and Sahar Ahmed2
1 Decoration Department, Helwan University, College of Applied Arts, Cairo, Egypt
2 Textile Printing, Dyeing and Finishing Department, Helwan University, College of Applied Arts, Cairo, Egypt
Original language: English
Copyright © 2014 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
This research is a Practice led research. It is made of two parts. First some experimental art paintings were made by the artist, based on abstract style, and using colors expressing various emotional feelings. These art paintings are made with power of human feelings and with the spiritual concentration to express these feelings especially into colors. These art paintings are made with the intention to express and also to transfer the spiritual mood of the concept in each case, to the viewers of art and the users of the final product. Next, these art paintings are being used to design textile prints that will keep, and even exaggerate these human emotional factors, that would provide emotional semantics to the users of the product. The designer of the textile prints will consider the slight differences between the colors on the canvas of the paintings, and the colors on the computer screens, and also the final colors on the output fabric material.
The designer and the artist will also consider in the computer stage of design the differences of perception of colors between humans in order to avoid any wrong interpret of color that might lead to expressing a different mood, semantic massage, to the user. This experiment will include a final comparison between the colors in the art paintings and the colors on the final textile print products to measure how accurate the stages of production.
Author Keywords: Colors perception, Abstract Color Paintings, Emotional Human, Repetition styles, Textile Prints.
Reham Mohsen1 and Sahar Ahmed2
1 Decoration Department, Helwan University, College of Applied Arts, Cairo, Egypt
2 Textile Printing, Dyeing and Finishing Department, Helwan University, College of Applied Arts, Cairo, Egypt
Original language: English
Copyright © 2014 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
This research is a Practice led research. It is made of two parts. First some experimental art paintings were made by the artist, based on abstract style, and using colors expressing various emotional feelings. These art paintings are made with power of human feelings and with the spiritual concentration to express these feelings especially into colors. These art paintings are made with the intention to express and also to transfer the spiritual mood of the concept in each case, to the viewers of art and the users of the final product. Next, these art paintings are being used to design textile prints that will keep, and even exaggerate these human emotional factors, that would provide emotional semantics to the users of the product. The designer of the textile prints will consider the slight differences between the colors on the canvas of the paintings, and the colors on the computer screens, and also the final colors on the output fabric material.
The designer and the artist will also consider in the computer stage of design the differences of perception of colors between humans in order to avoid any wrong interpret of color that might lead to expressing a different mood, semantic massage, to the user. This experiment will include a final comparison between the colors in the art paintings and the colors on the final textile print products to measure how accurate the stages of production.
Author Keywords: Colors perception, Abstract Color Paintings, Emotional Human, Repetition styles, Textile Prints.
How to Cite this Article
Reham Mohsen and Sahar Ahmed, “Using Abstract Color Paintings Expressing Feelings to Design Textile Prints Showing Emotional Human Factors of Design and Considering Differences of Color Perception between Humans,” International Journal of Innovation and Applied Studies, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 49–53, January 2014.