Have you ever felt anxious when walking into a room and not known why? Or perhaps you’ve felt inexplicably calm and relaxed in a different space? The artist Pablo Picasso once said that “colours, like features, follow the changes of the emotions.” Artists and interior designers alike agree that colour can dramatically affect your moods, feelings, and emotions.
The study of this phenomenon is called colour psychology: “how colours affect human behaviour, mood, or physiological processes.” Advocates of colour psychology (amongst them most modern marketeers) firmly believe that specific colours can “influence our buying choices, our feelings, and even our memories.”
Measuring the effects of colour can be tricky though. Colour perception is very subjective: different people have different ideas about – and responses to – colour.
There are various factors which influence colour perception – such as age, gender and culture – which make it difficult to determine if colour alone is impacting our emotions and behaviour. A good example would be the colour white. In most Western cultures, white is the colour of purity, cleanliness and peacefulness. In Eastern cultures, however, white is the colour of grief, sadness and death.
Whilst it may be hard to establish a direct cause and effect relationship between colour and behaviour, some generalisations about colours and their associations can be made. Warm colours (red, yellow, orange and pink) are thought to stimulate exciting emotions, and cool colours (blue, violet, and green) are associated with calmness and tranquillity. This is backed up by research which clearly showed that colour does “indeed have an effect on whether people feel warm, cool, calm, invited, relaxed, or uninvited.”
Colour specialist Leatrice Eiseman says that “colour is often called the ‘silent salesperson’ and in many cases must immediately create a brand identity.”
She believes that how colour affects us correlates to colour in nature. (We explored this topic in a previous blog post: Yellow Banana Good). Eiseman asked thousands of people what they thought of specific colours and found many patterns. For example, blue is almost always associated with blue skies, and from an evolutionary perspective, blue skies meant no storms coming and good sun for crops. She maintains that this is why blue reminds us of stability and calm.
Eisman also maintains that “colour within the business, retail or personal environment is also a critical factor in creating mood, image and a productive atmosphere that elicits a positive, favourable response.”
We couldn’t agree more and have applied this thinking to our new Signature COLOUR range of bathroom products, working with a colour psychologist to determine the best colour choices to offer our customers.
The COLOUR range offers hygiene products in nine striking colours, and 2 different finishes (either gloss or matt). Here are the behaviours and emotions that our colour psychologist believes each colour can inspire in bathroom users.
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