Showing posts with label Flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flowers. Show all posts

Friday, October 16, 2009

Lavender tulips and the psychology of lavender colour

Colour is a meaningful constant for sighted people and it is a powerful psychological tool. By using colour psychology, one can send a positive or negative message, encourage sales, calm a crowd, or make an athlete pump iron hard
Lavender is not so stuffy as regal purple. Rather, the meaning of lavender flowers is one of womanhood in her prime. The elegance of lavender reflects the grace and feminine beauty of those who receive it. Modest yet mature, lavender connotes a message of what it really means to be a woman.






Bicolor Tulips













Purple tulips and the psychology of purple colour

Colour is a meaningful constant for sighted people and it is a powerful psychological tool. By using colour psychology, one can send a positive or negative message, encourage sales, calm a crowd, or make an athlete pump iron hard.
What colour were the robes of kings and queens? Yes, they were purple, our most royal colour that is associated with wealth, prosperity, rich sophistication. This colour stimulates the brain activity used in problem solving. However, when overused in a common setting it is associated with putting on airs and being artificial. Use purple most carefully to lend an air of mystery, wisdom, and respect. Young adolescent girls are most likely to select nearly all shades of purple as their favourite colour.
Purple embodies the balance of red simulation and blue calm. This dichotomy can cause unrest or uneasiness unless the undertone is clearly defined at which point the purple takes on the characteristics of its undertone. A sense of mystic and royal qualities, purple is a colour often well liked by very creative or eccentric types and is the favourite colour of adolescent girls.








Magenta tulips and the psychology of magenta colour


Magenta symbolized artistic creativity or ani-racism

Pink tulips and the psychology of pink colour

Colour is a meaningful constant for sighted people and it is a powerful psychological tool. By using colour psychology, one can send a positive or negative message, encourage sales, calm a crowd, or make an athlete pump iron hard

Whereas red is the colour of deep and abiding love, pink is red’s youthful counterpart. The meaning of pink flowers is of innocent happiness. Caring but carefree: pink colour is more filial than romantic.








Red Tulips and the psychology of red colour

Colour is a meaningful constant for sighted people and it is a powerful psychological tool. By using colour psychology, one can send a positive or negative message, encourage sales, calm a crowd, or make an athlete pump iron hard.
Red has more personal associations than any other colour. Recognized as a stimulant red is inherently exciting and the amount of red is directly related to the level of energy perceived. Red draws attention towards itself.
Love, above all else, is the symbolic meaning of red flowers. The deeper the red, the deeper are the meaning. Dark reds show a charitable love while brighter reds reveal devoted passion. Whether this is love born of beauty, fire, or courage, red is the colour to have.
If you want to draw attention, use red. It is often where the eye looks first. Red is the colour of energy. The colour is also associated with movement and excitement. People surrounded by red find their heart beat faster then usual. Wearing red clothes will make you appear a bit heavier and certainly more noticeable: Some studies show red cars get more tickets but that maybe because the red car owners drive faster or the ticket giver notices the movement of the red car more prominently.











Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Black tulips and the psychology of black colour

Colour is a meaningful constant for sighted people and it is a powerful psychological tool. By using colour psychology, one can send a positive or negative message, encourage sales, calm a crowd, or make an athlete pump iron hard.
Black is a serious colour that evokes strong emotions; it is easy to overwhelm people with black colour. Black clothes make people appear thinner and more sophisticated It is the colour of authority and power, stability and strength. It is also associated with intelligence . It is a sombre colour and is sometimes associated with grief. It is also associated with evil









Orange Tulips and the psychology of orange colour

Colour is a meaningful constant for sighted people and it is a powerful psychological tool. By using colour psychology, one can send a positive or negative message, encourage sales, calm a crowd, or make an athlete pump iron hard


The most flamboyant colour on the planet .Orange tulips are vibrant and vibrancy is fun . Orange colour mixes the passion of red with the unbridled happiness of yellow. Orange, a close relative of red, sparks more controversy than any other hue. There is usually strong positive or negative association to orange and true orange generally elicits a stronger "love it" or "hate it" response than other colours.










Monday, October 5, 2009

Tulips : White, Green, Yellow, Peach, Orange,Black, Red, Deep Red, Pink, Magenta, Purple, Lavender, and Bicolor

Elegance and grace on display

 If you've never been thrilled to the very edges of your soul by a flower in spring bloom, maybe your soul has never been in bloom. ~Audra Foveo


White Tulips
Colour is a meaningful constant for sighted people and it is a powerful psychological tool. By using colour psychology, one can send a positive or negative message, encourage sales, calm a crowd, or make an athlete pump iron hard


White symbolizes clarity, cleanliness, neutrality, purity and honesty. The symbolic meaning of white is reverence and innocence. White is associated with creativity and is a compression of all the colours in the colour spectrum. There is nothing as relaxing as white tulips

In some eastern parts of the world, white is associated with mourning.








Yellow Tulips

It symbolizes Hope and Happiness

Yellow: the colour of the sun, associated with laughter, happiness and good times. Yellow shines with optimism, enlightenment, and happiness . It is a warm colour that has conflicting symbolism .On the one hand it denotes happiness and joy but on the other hand yellow is the colour of cowardice and deceit


A person surrounded by yellow feels optimistic because the brain actually releases more seratonin (it is a chemical that helps maintain a "happy feeling," and seems to help keep our moods under control by helping with sleep, calming anxiety, and relieving depression) when around this colour. It is the colour associated with optimism but be careful with yellow, when intense, it is the colour of flames and studies show babies cry more in (bright) yellow rooms and tempers flare more around that colour . It has the power to speed up our metabolism and bring out some creative thoughts. Yellow :if used wisely can be an effective tool for marketing . Some shades of yellow are associated with cowardice; but the more golden shades with the promise of better times.

 

















Green Tulips

Green is life: abundant in nature and signifies growth, renewal, health, and environment. A calming colour that is why green colour is used in hospitals. It is also the colour associated with envy, good luck, generosity and fertility. It is the traditional colour of peace, harmony, comfortable nurturing, support and well paced energy. Time moves faster in a green room.


Green is the national colour of Pakistan and Ireland and is strongly associated with these countries. Green has close association with Islam. The colour is reminiscent of Spring.

Green occupies more space in the spectrum visible to the human eye and is second only to blue as a favourite colour. Green is the pervasive colour in the natural world that is an ideal backdrop in interior design because we are so used to seeing it everywhere









Peach Tulips
Friendship is the true meaning of peach colour . Peach confirms gratitude and tender feeling.






Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Iris

             A flower's appeal is in its contradictions - so delicate in form yet strong in fragrance, so small in size yet big in beauty, so short in life yet long on effect. ~Adabella Radici