Color Quotations | Page 5
Color Quotes from:
- Henri Matisse
- Vincent Van Gogh
- Wassily Kandinsky
- Cassandra Clare
- Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
- Josef Albers
- Markus Zusak
- Hans Hofmann
- Leatrice Eiseman
- Paul Cezanne
- Malcolm X
- John French Sloan
- Pablo Picasso
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- John Ruskin
- Michael Jackson
- Paul Klee
- Edvard Munch
- Frederick Douglass
- Lauren Oliver
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Believe Quotes
My mantra is, 'Don't be afraid of color.' What did it do to you? Do a color testing in alternate kinds of light you desire in the room because the pigment will change. And I refuse to believe that pale pale or white colors in a small room will buy you more square footage. Go with color all the way.
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Father Quotes
My father raised us like... we were not allowed to see people in any sort of colors, but also we were not allowed to call people fat. If ever we were to say, 'Oh that fat person, or this person,' he would make us put a bar of soap in our mouth and count to 10. We weren't allowed to look at people like that.
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Creativity Quotes
Design is the fundamental soul of a man-made creation that ends up expressing itself in successive outer layers of the product or service. The iMac is not just the color or translucence or the shape of the shell. The essence of the iMac is to be the finest possible consumer computer in which each element plays together.
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Opportunity Quotes
For so many years, I've been an actor acting in other people's movies, and in 'Unstoppable,' I'm producing it, and I have an opportunity to create some of that excitement with style and form and different color templates and things like that. So, as an artist, it's really exciting.
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Black And White Quotes
The over-all point is that new technology will not necessarily replace old technology, but it will date it. By definition. Eventually, it will replace it. But it's like people who had black-and-white TVs when color came out. They eventually decided whether or not the new technology was worth the investment.
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Clothes Quotes
Throughout history, clothes represented who you were; they are a great vehicle for explaining who you are. During the Ching dynasty, for example, what you wore and how it was made reflected your status in society. People could literally read your clothes like a book, just by its color and how it was embroidered.