All Color Symbols Articles
Links Below to All Color Symbols Articles
Summaries of All Color Symbol Articles
Colors Meanings
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
Colors meanings are closely related to cultural associations with various colors. The study of color psychology, color therapy and color symbolism reveals an in-depth perspective on both society and individuals. Find more information here.
Find Your Color
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
Color symbolism affects nearly every area of life: clothing, interior design, graphic design, computer interface design, fine art, consumer product development and packaging, food choices and corporate identity. Your colour preferences can reveal basic aspects of your personality. Think about the colors you wear most often. These colors indicate both your strengths and your weaknesses. The human aura is an electromagnetic energy field around the body. The colors of the aura can indicate the strengths and weaknesses present and allow for the correction of imbalances.
Color Psychology
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
Colors psychology is a fascinating topic that has captured the imagination of scientists, artists and poets. Color theory is is a huge part of the fashion industry, home decor and ongoing studies that try and determine the ideal surroundings for both work and relaxation. Learn more here.
Color Healing
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
Color symbolism and color therapy has had a long history in many societies and is closely intertwined with cultural associations with various colors. Some modern color therapists take a purely biological approach to color therapy and healing art. Learn more here.
Blue Symbolism
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
This article covers the connections between the color blue and health, personality, language, spirituality, interior design, nature, art and the mind. Read about the world's favorite color!
Bible Color Meanings
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
Colors meanings play an important role in religion worldwide. In the Christian tradition, color meanings come both from the meanings in the Bible and from the traditions of religious art. Learn more here.
Garden Flower Colors and Meaning
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
Creating a beautiful garden is like painting a picture in living color. Achieving color harmony, contrast and effective color combinations in the garden is a fascinating art. Read about the flower symbolism and fascinating facts about popular garden flowers including bluebells, foxglove, impatiens, lupines, marigolds, poppies, tulips, sunflowers and sweet peas. Your garden flowers will take on a whole new level of meaning!
Flower Color Healing
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
Dr. Edward Bach believed that disease is a manifestation of negative mental states. The chart below indicates the thirty eight remedies that Bach developed, their colors and the states of mind they are intended to treat.
Gems and Color
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
The molecular structure of gems filter out certain wavelengths as light passes through them, giving them their characteristic colors. Both precious and semi-precious stones can be used to affect character, mood and physical health.
Color and Music
By Kathleen Karlsen, MA
The experiences of color and music have always been closely intertwined. From the days of the ancient Greeks through the Middle Ages and into the Renaissance, both color and music were widely considered to possess inherent moral powers to influence their viewers and listeners for better or for worse.
Purple Power
By Kathryn Weber
Purple is mixture of soothing, calm blue with boisterous, energetic red. Purple is associated with royalty. It symbolizes power, nobility, luxury, and ambition.
Rose Color Meaning
By Joe Griffon and Adam Carter
There are so many different kinds of roses and colors. There is a roses color meaning for each different color. Automatically everyone can see the symbolism of love with all kinds of roses, but the true symbolism comes from the color of the bloom. Here is a list of most colors.
Red Color Meaning
By Joey Pebble and Abhishek Agarwal
Red may be the most powerful color in the spectrum. Less somber than black, but more powerful than orange, it is a color which incites emotions, and causes people to react, in both biological and psychological ways.
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