Completely Composed · Week 7 of 52
Color Schemes & Harmonies
One color sets a mood; a relationship between colors builds a whole world. This week we pair hues into palettes that sing instead of shout.
Last week you learned to control a single color. The real magic, though, lives in the relationships between colors. A pleasing combination is called a color harmony, and the color wheel hands you a small set of reliable recipes for building one. Learn these and you'll stop guessing why one palette sings and another fights with itself.
The Harmonies Worth Knowing
- Monochromatic — a single hue in many values and saturations. Unified, elegant, calm.
- Analogous — neighbors on the wheel (yellow, orange, red). Comfortable and natural; it's how most sunsets and forests are built.
- Complementary — opposites on the wheel (blue/orange, red/green). Maximum contrast and energy — the famous "teal and orange" of cinema.
- Split-complementary — a hue plus the two neighbors of its opposite. The pop of complementary with less tension.
- Triadic — three evenly spaced hues. Balanced but lively and playful.
Give One Color the Lead
A harmony isn't an equal split. The strongest palettes follow something like a 60-30-10 balance — a dominant color, a supporting color, and a small accent — so the eye knows where to rest. When every color shouts at the same volume, the image turns to noise. Which leads to the most useful color skill of all: restraint. Limiting a busy scene to two colors is one of the fastest ways to a stronger photograph, and it's a quiet preview of the hierarchy and unity we'll formalize later.
How Palettes Behave by Frame Shape
"I dropped orange into the highlights and teal into the shadows, and my boring street shot suddenly looked like a film still. Okay — I get the hype now."
Alexandra
In the Edit: Color Grading in Lightroom Classic
Last week you controlled colors one channel at a time; this week you impose a whole palette. The Color Grading panel in Lightroom Classic is built for harmony:
- Use the three wheels — Shadows, Midtones, Highlights — to steer different tonal ranges toward different hues.
- Build a complementary grade by pushing shadows one way and highlights toward the opposite (the classic teal-shadow / orange-highlight split).
- Or unify toward analogous or monochromatic warmth, then use Blending and Balance to control how the ranges meet.
This is how you create a harmony that wasn't fully there in the capture — gently, so it still feels like a photograph and not a filter.
One color sets a mood; a relationship between colors builds a world. Pick a scheme, give one color the lead, and your frames stop competing with themselves. That closes our work with color — next week we add the feel of a surface: texture.
