The Complete Color Harmony is the only color guide you will every need. Unlike most color guides, which are either strictly color theory or strictly color psychology, this new edition to the Color Harmony series combines the best of both of these worlds. In “What’s Your Color?†authors Tina Sutton and Bride M. Whelan help readers determine their best colors and suggest why some colors may work while others won’t. The book also includes an expanded and updated “Color Trends†section that not only discusses trends and how they are predicted but also gives advice on how to be a trend spotter.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Bride Whelan
Bride Whelan is the executive director of the Society of Publication Designers, NYC. For ten years she has taught color theory and practice at Parsons School of Design. Ms. whelan's work in color has been featured in Conde Nast's House & Garden and Gourmet magazines. She has appeared frequently on NBC's Today Show, CBS Morning News and Fox Television News, discussing the role of color in everyday living and personal environments. Her expertise in color solutions has led her to work with the leading proponents of the industrial, home furnishings/shelter, and design industries. A new book detailing this wide range of topics is scheduled for publication in Fall 2004.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Tina Sutton
TinaSutton has been a consultant to national corporations, retailers, and advertising agencies for more than 25 years, specializing in color and fashion marketing as well as tracking and forecasting consumer trends. She writes and lecturers regularly on these topics, and has appeared on television and radio programs nationawide. She has served as a fashion editor and feature writer for a variety of newspapers and magazines and currently writes a weekly fashion column for the oston Globe Magazine. Sutton teaches and speaks frequently on "The Psychology of Color" at schools, business, and museums, and has delivered lectures at New York's Fashion Institute of Technology, the Massachusetts College of Art, Skinner Auction Galleries, and the Springfield Museums. She researches fashion and color trends through history as well, and recently wrote the catalog for the Hollywood Costume Exhibit: Dressed for the Part at the American Textile History Museum.
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