Page 110 & 111 of the book Color for interiors, historical and modern; an essential reference work covering the major period styles of history and including modern palettes for the authentic decoration of homes, institutional and commercial interiors by Birren, Faber, 1900-1988 with small paragraph of text on page 110 and color swatches on page 111. CHART 13 FOR CHAPTER 16 The importance of color in factories is first to control brightness in the general field of view for an efficient seeing condition. Interiors are then conditioned for emotional pleasure and interest, using warm, cool, or luminous hues as working conditions suggest. Color should be functional and not merely decorative. The brilliant samples in the second column of the chart are for use as a safety code to mark important hazards. INDUSTRIAL PLANTS LIGHT GREEN BEIGE LIGHT BLUE SOFT YELLOW LIGHT GRAY MEDIUM GRAY DEEP GRAY SPOTLIGHT BUFF MEDIUM GREEN SANDALWOOD MEDIUM BLUE SOLAR YELLOW ALERT ORANGE FIRE RED SAFETY GREEN CAUTION BLUE
⛲ Why So Many Control Rooms Were Seafoam Green
by Beth Mathews
bethmathews.com
The Color Theory Behind Industrial Seafoam Green
#ColorTheory #SeaFoamGreen #Design #FaberBirren #Industrial
bethmathews.substack.com/p/why-so-man...