Support for Indie Authors discussion
Fun
>
Do you Write in Color?






Exactly. Most colours are connected to things in our life. Many of them in our genes. It is natural that if you want to set a scene the way you imagine and feel it, you will instinctively use some of them, unless there is something stronger to override it.

Now, I'm still not sold on the concept that red and yellow are supposed to make you want fast food because it makes you think of ketchup and mustard. ;p
I sure do.
All of my main characters have associated themselves with a colour.
- It shows up as an accent on their armor.
- It reflects a bit in their personalities.
- It is the reason why one character is 'broken' and in the story (they couldn't pick a favourite).
- It shows up later in book two manifested as additional characters.
- It allows other characters to express subtle emotions to other characters without mentioning them by name.
- It is a spoiler for book 3 if you can break the odd colour code in book 2.
- The main character gets upset if things that should be in proper rainbow colour order are not.
- It lets me brand and market the characters.
Also, recently I am writing IN colour as well. My short stories are only eBooks. They can be in colour, literally, for the same cost as they are on a screen and not printed. Literally writing in colour now. It is great fun!
All of my main characters have associated themselves with a colour.
- It shows up as an accent on their armor.
- It reflects a bit in their personalities.
- It is the reason why one character is 'broken' and in the story (they couldn't pick a favourite).
- It shows up later in book two manifested as additional characters.
- It allows other characters to express subtle emotions to other characters without mentioning them by name.
- It is a spoiler for book 3 if you can break the odd colour code in book 2.
- The main character gets upset if things that should be in proper rainbow colour order are not.
- It lets me brand and market the characters.
Also, recently I am writing IN colour as well. My short stories are only eBooks. They can be in colour, literally, for the same cost as they are on a screen and not printed. Literally writing in colour now. It is great fun!
I'm absolutely aware of colors when I write. One of my characters who sees thought forms describes the colors of the various thought forms.

You have to be careful about things like that, they can be very ethnocentric (or cultural specific).
For example, that link's write up on White and Black sticks really close to Western ideas about those colors. White = purity, Black = death and bad things.
Yet in Japanese culture White is symbolic of death. It's traditionally worn at funerals. White carnations are a symbol of mourning.
Black in traditional Japanese culture is associated with feminine energy (both threatening and alluring), as well as with night and mystery.
Here's a more culturally inclusive link: http://www.empower-yourself-with-colo...

Black for me personally, though, is not associated with evil. It's associated with transcendence, the void, the absolute, that mythical/spiritual place were duality and differentiation dissolves into unknowable oneness. In that sense, it is in fact death, but not death as a specter, but rather as joining/becoming a universal and fundamental reality where "I" and "you" have no meaning.
Every night when we're in dreamless sleep, we're in blackness. We're in that void: "I die every night."

A red shirt is not actually red. It is a shirt that absorbs all colors EXCEPT red. It rejects red. It reflects red wavelengths back to your eye.
So white is and absolute rejection of all other colors. Black loves all the color frequencies and absorbs them, reflecting back nothing (ergo we see an absence of color).
Make of that what you will. I think it's a fun perspective to contemplate.

Well yeah, but tell that to the poor schmuck on the away team. ;)

Well yeah, but tell that to the poor schmuck on the away team. ;)"
Oh.. I miss that like button sometimes :)
Micah wrote: "Missy wrote: "I found this interesting chart and blog post about color symbolism and what colors mean..."
You have to be careful about things like that, they can be very ethnocentric (or cultural ..."
Nice chart, Micah
You have to be careful about things like that, they can be very ethnocentric (or cultural ..."
Nice chart, Micah

Does publishing on an ebook with a different color bring up issues if someone is colorblind or has trouble reading certain colors? Does the ebook allow the user to change the font color?

As for keeping track of POV, instead of having multiple word documents open, why not use ywriter? It has a POV tracker in various colors. I'm not sure if the colors can be changed, but at least you can get all your notes and such in one program instead of tabbing over a lot. There's been so many documents i had to keep doing merge checks on because i forget which notes are recent and screw them up, lolz.
as for printing in color (if you can afford it) - yes, it can cause issue with folks who are colorblind. i'm not sure if colors can appear in ebooks (even if you use html codes) but i think the newer readers can render them however, older readers (especially eink) won't be able to. I tend to embed fonts and use different (yet similar) font families to show the difference between who's speaking/devices being used if that kind of situation calls for it.
That depends on if it is a fixed layout epub or not.
I don't even know if regular epub files do colour, I really won't think they do. The reader controls that.
but fixed layout ones are whatever you want them to be.
I only use colour as a very light background, I'm very colour blind sensitive as I know someone who is quite colour blind. he checks all my books first.
I don't even know if regular epub files do colour, I really won't think they do. The reader controls that.
but fixed layout ones are whatever you want them to be.
I only use colour as a very light background, I'm very colour blind sensitive as I know someone who is quite colour blind. he checks all my books first.



W. - Red is the complimentary colour to green. They are used together all the time during Christmas.
Red harmonizes with purple and orange.
When designing with red, you treat it as a dark colour, which is why there is so little contrast between red and black. Red is visually almost black to our eyes thanks to its wavelength.
Red on black is hard to see.
Red harmonizes with purple and orange.
When designing with red, you treat it as a dark colour, which is why there is so little contrast between red and black. Red is visually almost black to our eyes thanks to its wavelength.
Red on black is hard to see.
Sometimes. F'r'instance, whenever a character has violet or purple eyes, they're special in some way. Could be a good way, could be a bad way, but there's always something special about them. And, yes, that's vague and, yes, that's all I have to say about that.
Sometimes I used color in the opposite way from what one might expect. In one story I have a character living in a house that is light blue with pink trim. One might think the person living there is sweet and kind; they are anything but.
Sometimes I used color in the opposite way from what one might expect. In one story I have a character living in a house that is light blue with pink trim. One might think the person living there is sweet and kind; they are anything but.

I am intrigued in writing in colour though, and I've always wanted to try to do so. It's been interesting to read through the responses and see how people have done so.



Highly recommended: Don't mess with colors in an eBook! I'm not sure if most eReaders allow colored fonts or not, but a lot of people still read on older eReaders or ePaper readers like the Kindle Paperwhite, which are black and white only.
eBook covers, if designed properly, are designed to look good in gray scale as well as in color. Messing with color w/in the book would mean having to go through all that again. Different colors on black and white readers are just going to come through as shades of gray.

I have other vehicles too; like the etymology of my lead character's names are big clues.
And my latest one involves some crystal magick.
(but no, I wouldn't actually write in colour literally. Just write about it)

Clever, no?? ;-P
Colour can be incredibly powerful. Use responsibly.
Never say never. :)
Colour can be useful inside an eBook. I still believe this.
Just be mindful of tone. If it switches to grayscale on some readers, then be prepared for it still being legible in grayscale!
Here is my latest attempt at colouring an eBook.
Colour can be useful inside an eBook. I still believe this.
Just be mindful of tone. If it switches to grayscale on some readers, then be prepared for it still being legible in grayscale!
Here is my latest attempt at colouring an eBook.


I was very conscious of color in a recent short story I put out. It deals with racism and the only things described in color were the skin of the characters and their eye color.

I do. As a matter of fact, I have highly detailed notes on color for a number of the characters in the series I'm working on. One of many examples, the main character always wears either a red or salmon colored tie, and uses them both for provocation.
His daughter, on the other hand, wears a lot of purples and blues for many of the reasons stated in your link.
Beyond that, in the kindle version of my latest book (and this will carry through all main volumes), I had the chapter numbers set in a sort of all-seeing eye that gradually reddens as the story intensifies, like so:

C.B. wrote: "Never say never. :)
Colour can be useful inside an eBook. I still believe this.
Just be mindful of tone. If it switches to grayscale on some readers, then be prepared for it still being legible in..."
That's really cool!

As for colors in the story, I have a few. For instance, my protagonist's eyes change colors with his moods, a side effect from genetic manipulation. His 'sidekick' loves everything red (maybe because she's a vampire). And in my latest story, my MC goes on a planet that's all in shades of titian and nothing else.

In my Y/A paranormal romance, the eyes and hair of the fairies are not natural human colors. Well, sort of not... Tee-hee. ; )





Since my long-term heroine is a brunette she has a trick of wearing a black velvet jumpsuit, then in the moment of crisis turning her back on someone who is looking for her. In low lighting she can vanish completely.
I also use this in the insignia of rank on the Space Fleet uniforms. Cadet badges are dark blue, midshipmen green, most officers silver and from ADSC (Commodore) upwards gold. The dark blue looks junior because of lack of contrast.
I found this interesting chart and blog post about color symbolism and what colors mean. http://jaycwolfe.com/2015/05/20/whats...
Do you use colors in your writing to convey emotion? How?