Munsell Color System

I have recently gone down the rabbit hole of the Munsell color system. It was developed in 1915 by Albert Munsell. It is a color identification and notation system. It is very specific. For example instead of saying you need the color orange you may say I need a yellow/red hue 5R with a value of 8 and chroma of 6.

Most of us learn to mute colors or knock back a colors vibrancy by adding the complimentary color to the mix. In other words, if I am painting a blue sky and mix a vibrant blue and realize it is too blue and needs to be less intense or less chromatic I would mix in a bit of orange. Orange has a wide range so which one? It is really by trial and error and experience that you get the correct color. With Munsell artists use a gray scale to mute the chroma.

Munsell uses three words to describe the color. The first is hue: (what color is it? Red, Yellow /Red, Green/Yellow, Yellow, Green, Blue/Green, Blue, Purple/Blue, Purple and Red/Purple. The second is value. How light or dark is it? The value scale has 9 values plus white and black. 9 is the lightest value. The third is chroma. How intense and powerful is the color?

There are many books, tools and charts that you can buy to help learn this system. I have the student book edition 6 with cut out cards.

Punch out the color chips
Basic color wheel and value chart
Put the chips in the correct order and glue them in

Each of the 10 colors hues has a page in the student book. In the complete set each of the color hues has 4 pages.

Excited to see where this takes me! There are classes online that teach this technique. Kathleen Speranza is great. https://www.kathleensperanza.com/

One Reply to “Munsell Color System”

Comments are closed.