Trichromatic model Most color wheels are based on three primary colors, three secondary colors, and the six intermediates formed by mixing a primary with a secondary, known as tertiary colors, for a total of 12 main divisions; some add more intermediates, for 24 named colors. They make use of the
trichromatic model of color.
Subtractive The typical artists' paint or pigment color wheel includes the blue, red, and yellow
primary colors. The corresponding
secondary colors are green, orange, and violet, or purple. The
tertiary colors are green-yellow, yellow-orange, orange-red, red-violet/purple, purple/violet-blue and blue-green. Non-digital visual artists typically use
red,
yellow, and
blue primaries (
RYB color model) arranged at three equally spaced points around their color wheel. Printers and others who use modern subtractive color methods and terminology use
cyan,
magenta, and
yellow as
subtractive primaries. Intermediate and interior points of color wheels and circles represent color mixtures. In a paint or subtractive color wheel, the 'center of gravity' is usually (but not always) black, representing all colors of light being absorbed.
Additive A color wheel based on
RGB (red, green, blue) additive primaries has cyan, magenta, and yellow secondaries. Alternatively, the same arrangement of colors around a circle can be described as based on cyan, magenta, and yellow subtractive primaries, with red, green, and blue being secondaries. Sometimes a RGV (red, green, violet) triad is used instead. In an additive color circle, the center is white or gray, indicating a mixture of different wavelengths of light (all wavelengths, or two complementary colors, for example). , labeled with HTML color keywords. The
HSL and HSV color spaces are simple geometric transformations of the
RGB cube into cylindrical form. The outer top circle of the HSV cylinder – or the outer middle circle of the HSL cylinder – can be thought of as a color wheel. There is no authoritative way of labelling the colors in such a color wheel, but the six colors which fall at the corners of the RGB cube are given names in the
X11 color list, and are
named keywords in HTML.
Opponent process model Some color wheels are based on the four
opponent process colors - red, yellow, blue and green. This includes those of the
Natural Color System. ==The color circle and color vision==