Color: The root of all graphic designs


by Florie Lyn Masarate - Date: 2006-12-02 - Word Count: 365 Share This!

This keeps things organized, can reduce time that is wasted and of course, saves more money. These are just some of the qualities that customers may be looking for in you.

These factors are also the root of graphic design. In graphic design, all factors should point towards making your company look strong and secure in the eyes of your customers, old and new.

How do you show strength and security without having to bring the customer into your office?

One way is through colors. Believe it or not, color plays a big part in the message you are trying to deliver through the materials company are distributing. For instance, the color red is a strong color and it portrays not only strength, but also temper and anger. Red is one of the strongest colors.

You may be asking what does color have to do with your business.

Every company or business has a set of corporate colors. These colors can be found initially in your logo. More often than not, your logo will consist of two or three colors. If it is three, then these are your primary corporate colors. As set of secondary colors can be built from the three primaries. This would be your color palette.

Here is how your colors come into play and how they work:

1. Gather all the pertinent information about your colors. You will need to know certain specifications like the Pantone Matching System. CMYK and RGB.

2. At the beginning of a project, all color information should be given to the designer or marketer. Specify which colors are the primary and which are the secondary.

3. Using full color pictures in the designs are fine. Just make sure that the colors in the photograph compliment those in your palette.

By simply following these basic steps, you can be sure that your business is always showing its true colors. Remember, people can sometimes be so judgmental that they form an impression just by the colors they see initially.

Strength and security will be projected to your customers. And you will have the satisfaction of knowing this when you see them choosing your products and services. All because of the color and the color palette you are using.


Florie Lyn Masarate got a flair for reading and writing when she got her first subscription of the school newsletter in kindergarten. She had her first article published on that same newsletter in the third grade.

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