Imagine you have a box full of crayons that can change colors, just like how your favorite crayon might start as yellow and then turn green when you mix it with blue.
Color changes are like steps in a staircase: each step is a little different from the one before. If there are 7 levels, that means you have 7 of these steps to climb or go down, each giving you a new shade.
How It Works
You start at the bottom with your first color, say red. Then:
- You take one small step up and it becomes a little darker.
- Another step makes it even darker.
- Keep going until you reach the top of the staircase, that's the 7th level.
It’s like mixing paint: if you add more blue to your red, it starts looking more purple. Each time you go up a level, you're adding just a tiny bit more color, making the whole thing look slightly different each time.
So, with 7 levels of color changes, you can create many shades by moving up or down this colorful staircase, one step at a time! Imagine you have a box full of crayons that can change colors, just like how your favorite crayon might start as yellow and then turn green when you mix it with blue.
Color changes are like steps in a staircase: each step is a little different from the one before. If there are 7 levels, that means you have 7 of these steps to climb or go down, each giving you a new shade.
Examples
- A rainbow with seven distinct shades
- A traffic light changing through seven steps
- A flower blooming in seven different colors
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See also
- How Does Colors in Architectural Representation Work?
- How Color Theory Affects Screen Printing | Color Shift EXPLAINED?
- How Does GREEN SHADES Work?
- How Does Personality Type and Color Preference | Blake Augustine | TEDxYouth@Conejo Work?
- How Does My favorite art secret - Simultaneous Contrast Work?