![]() ![]() But certain combinations will look much better than others. Technically, you can combine any of the colours on the True Autumn palette with each other. Whereas if you lean more towards Dark Autumn, choose the lighter colours on the Dark Autumn palette – such as Mustard Gold, Butterum and Spinach Green. ![]() If you lean more towards Soft Autumn, opt for the darker and brighter colours on the Soft Autumn palette – such as Fall Leaf, Cardinal and Olive Night. Depending on where you fall on the True Autumn spectrum, you can borrow some colours from your sister palettes since they are close enough to the True Autumn colour palette. True Spring colours are vibrant, clear and more contrasting.Ĭompared to Soft Autumn, the colours are warmer, brighter and slightly darker overall.Īnd compared to the third Autumn season Dark Autumn, the colours are warmer, softer and slightly lighter.Īs sister palettes, Soft Autumn and Dark Autumn both share True Autumn’s aspects of muted and warm, respectively. With their opposite season True Spring, the colours share the same warmth but are muted and darker. And the colours are rich, medium-dark and very warm. ![]() True Autumn sits between Soft Autumn and Dark Autumn on the seasonal flow chart. However, the colours may overall appear more saturated because our eyes are more reactive to warm colours. In line with this season’s secondary aspect, the colours are medium-low in chroma. And while most colours are in the middle of the value scale, there are more that lean towards the darker end. The colours range from fairly light (beige) to fairly dark (deep brown). Instead, there are more yellows, greens and warm browns, which are naturally yellow-based. And you will only see warmer shades of blue that have a tint of yellow, like turquoise. Consequently, you will find very few shades of blue (which is the coolest colour of all). This means the colours contain yellow undertones but no blue undertones at all. Thus, the colour palette sits at the warmest end of the hue scale. Blade Runner deserves credit, celebration and remembrance for it is simply an excellent film.True Autumn’s primary aspect is warm. The score by Vangelis is strangely gripping when combined with the striking cinematography of the film. In any other film, this would have felt out-of-place but here it is simply perfect. Since it is all about technology, it fits then that Blade Runner features a ridiculous amount of product placement, especially from Atari. Whoever thought of this combination is a genius. In spite of a rich glaze of science fiction and futurism coating this adventure, there are distinct film noir elements present primarily in the bluish haze that the film is seen through and its gritty urban atmosphere. The things Deckard encounters on his detective journey raise many philosophical questions like: Who is really a replicant? Are replicants really bad? If replicants are bad, when why did we go to such lengths with our technology to create them? Are replicants really humans? Is Deckard a hero? This truly is a film that demands subsequent discussion and its ambiguous ending leave a haunting and eerie feeling. Set in 2019 Los Angeles, Blade Runner zooms in on the eerily-lit, urban streets of the city and follows Richard Deckard superbly played by Harrison Ford who brings an exquisite moral ambiguity to his character a special policeman who tracks down and terminates artificially-created humans called replicants, who have escaped from an Off-World colony and made their way to earth and need to be stopped. ![]() It is timeless beauty with huge doses of emotion. I love it not only for the initial feeling it gives, but because of its perseverance none of the visuals, themes or technology feel dated but as deep, gripping and current as ever. Ridley Scott's Blade Runner is a brilliantly crafted science fiction film that not only touches upon, but bravely plunges into deep philosophical questions, making it simply ten times more important than any film of its genre. Dark, deep, uncertain, unsettling imagine the most beautiful nightmare you've ever had this is Blade Runner (1982). ![]()
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