Unnamed paintings to modify the way children learn colors

Ima Moteki a couple of Japanese designers have created some Unnamed paintings to change the way children learn colors. Instead of bearing the written name or a strip with the color that these paintings contain, they come in white tubes with an equation of the primary colors that make up the color of the paint that is inside the tube.

For example, orange is represented by a red and a yellow circle and thus with a wide range of colors. What does not occur to these people ...

According to its designers, Yusuke Imai Y Ayami Moteki, the reason not to name the paintings is to be able to give a wider and deeper meaning to the color itself. That way children can experience and feel freer to form their own colors. It also helps to understand the basics of color formation because by expressing the color it contains through a color equation, children can understand that the greater or lesser amount of one type of color or another the result will be a different color. , something that will undoubtedly help you in the future to achieve much more realistic colors or simply the shade you are looking for.

Who knows, maybe in a few years we don't talk about stick pink or pearl gray but about white with 10% red and things like that. Although it may not be very useful out there, but the idea as a learning method has seemed fantastic.