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    color trends

    Explore " color trends" with insightful episodes like "Color Statements with Claudia Cándano", "Empowerment through Color with Lisa Maria Pippus", "Shooting Color with Ellen Mirck", "The Bottom Line of Color with Anat Lechner" and "Color of the Year 2022 with Color Guru Leatrice Eiseman" from podcasts like ""The Color Authority™", "The Color Authority™", "The Color Authority™", "The Color Authority™" and "Design Speaks"" and more!

    Episodes (10)

    Color Statements with Claudia Cándano

    Color Statements with Claudia Cándano

    What is happening in the world of fashion, what colors prevail and where does Mexican fashion stand in all of this? Claudia Cándano talks about her passion for fashion and how she incorporates color at ELLE while she is key on taking fashion to a broader audience. 

    With more than 14 years of experience in the world of fashion and lifestyle journalism, Claudia Cándano began her career at InStyle Mexico as Fashion Editor, where she headed one of the most successful and proactive fashion teams in the Mexican publishing industry. This experience and the consolidation of her own iconoclastic style led her to the direction of the fashion area of ELLE Mexico, and later, as Editor in Chief of ELLE Mexico, as well as ELLE Decoration and ELLE Man where she has given an important turn to the communication of the media. She has built a team recognized as one of the best in the Mexican publishing industry. Claudia has also excelled as a stylist for various celebrities and has given creative advice to designers for the creation of their collections. She studied Graphic Design at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City and her unmistakable signature has been continuously perfected with renowned courses, such as Fashion Studies at Parsons The New School for Design, in New York. Art Direction for Fashion and Fashion Journalism, at The University of the Arts, London Central Saint Martins, in England.
    Claudia led for 4 years the efforts of the successful project Mexico Diseña by ELLE, as project director and jury leader of the TV series with the same name. From her efforts in different platforms, she created Hablemos de moda #ELLEPodcast, the first fashion podcast in Mexico.

    Thanks to her trajectory, she continues as Editor in Chief of ELLE, but also serves as Editorial Director of Grupo Expansión's soft news brands, being in charge of media such as Quién, ELLE, ELLE Decoration, ELLE Man, Aire and Life & Style. She is also in charge of the group's Branded Content area.


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    Empowerment through Color with Lisa Maria Pippus

    Empowerment through Color with Lisa Maria Pippus

    How can you empower yourself with color and bring out the best of yourself? Lisa Maria Pippus explains how she helps her clients in selecting the right color palette to literally shine and portrait what they want to stand for. In this podcast episode you will learn about terms like color DNA, archetypes and personal branding. 

    Lisa Maria Pippus, born Canadian, living in Berlin, studied fashion in Toronto and Milan, empowers design and style professionals to speed-read their clients’ aesthetic preferences through the "Aesthetic Compass Inventory". Understanding the four aesthetic direction and their sub-types allows them to add to their bottom line. By quickly understanding the language, color, line and shape choices that make their client's hearts sing. The Aesthetic preferences Compass also empower leaders to 'be fabulously on-brand'. This means to express their truth in a powerfully authentic way. To align their personality strengths to their wardrobe so they are seen, heard and valued. 


    Thank you for listening! Follow us through our website or social media!

    https://www.thecolorauthority.com/podcast

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    Shooting Color with Ellen Mirck

    Shooting Color with Ellen Mirck

    How did a Dutch fashion stylist end up in the Milan and how does she mix her northern upbringing and style with the Italian? Ellen tells her story through her styling work around the world using color, fabric and texture to create luxurious yet cool stylings. She loves mystery which can clearly be seen through her work for Vogue Arabia. Ellen explains what intrigues her so much about fashion and how color fits into that world. 

    Ellen Mirck is a Dutch Fashion Stylist and sustainable editor based in Milan. She does fashion styling,  art direction and brand consultancy. She is contributing editor of Vogue Arabia and also collaborates with magazines such as Vogue Brazil, Lampoon, Numerò Netherlands, Tank and Cap74094. 

    Her clients are Burberry, Max Mara, Hogan, Pomellato, Moncler, Ermenegildo Zegna, Fay, Tommy Hilfiger, Bvlgari, Converse, Benetton, Tod's, Bally, Palm Angels and many more.
    Ellen used to live in London and work for Alexander McQueen and Hermès. She studied Economy in the Netherlands and graduated Cum Laude in Fashion Styling at Marangoni Milan. In her work she instinctively pairs the clean, graphic lines from Northern Europe with the warmth and a certain dramatic flair found in the South. She finds the precious in the details with interesting, nature- inspired textures. As a Stylist and Art Director, she'd say she more of a storyteller, really getting into the mind of the client to translate their vision and vivid imagination that might be slumbering underneath the surface. Ellen enjoys clothes, the beauty of them, but also believes in wearing your values.


    Thank you for listening! Follow us through our website or social media!

    https://www.thecolorauthority.com/podcast

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    The Bottom Line of Color with Anat Lechner

    The Bottom Line of Color with Anat Lechner

    In this episode you may learn how to rationalise your color choices through data and statistics, a requirement ever more important when working with large businesses. Anat Lechner will explain how she ended up in the world of color and how her business perspective on color helps the creative industry today.  Anat believes we need to first understand color before we can apply it, let alone use it to drive business decisions. Her company Huedata gives you the necessary background information to make well-informed color choices based on true market data. 

    Anat Lechner, PhD, is a Professor of Business Management at the Stern School of Business, New York University where she focuses on disruptive leadership, innovation, and strategic change. She’s also the founder of Huedata Inc., a color intelligence company. A former Research Fellow at McKinsey & Co. Dr. Lechner has advised to global Fortune 100 firms in the Financial Services, Pharmaceuticals, Chemicals, Energy, Food, High Tech, Design and Retail industries. She’s had numerous appearances on the NYT, WSJ, BBC, ABC, Forbes and other premier global media outlets Anat holds an MBA and a PhD in Organization Management from Rutgers University, NJ.


    Thank you for listening! Follow us through our website or social media!

    https://www.thecolorauthority.com/podcast

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    Love Good Color

    Love Good Color
    Today's episode is all about Color. Color for social good, color to engage our senses, color in ways you probably haven’t thought of before. Laura Guido-Clark is the Founder and President of the color consultancy Love Good Color and the non-for-profit, Project Color Corps. Color changed the way Laura sees the world, and she’s using it to change the world for good. Learn more about Love Good Color: https://lovegoodcolor.com/ Project Color Corps: http://www.projectcolorcorps.org/ For more Imagine a Place stories, please visit: https://ofs.com/imagine-a-place Connect with Doug Shapiro on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/doshapiro/Follow Doug on LinkedIn. Click here to get your copy of Doug's children's book—Design Your World. Follow Imagine a Place on LinkedIn.

    Creating Car Colors, 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz

    Creating Car Colors, 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz

    Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell kick off the show by discussing the recently unveiled 2022 Hyundai Santa Cruz--a genre-bending compact SUV/pickup "Sport Adventure Vehicle" that is slated to go on sale this summer. La Shirl Turner, Director of the Advanced Color and Materials Design Studio at Stellantis, joins us to discuss how she and her team develop paint colors and interior trim for Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, and Ram vehicles. Damon has a Mopar car-color quiz for Tom and Jill, and Tom runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including test-drive reviews of the 2021 GMC Yukon AT4 and Nissan Leaf SL Plus.

    Color Trends (pt 2): The Passion of Millennial Pink, Gen Z Color Trends, Kindercore + Wonderful Wiggly Design

    Color Trends (pt 2): The Passion of Millennial Pink, Gen Z Color Trends, Kindercore + Wonderful Wiggly Design

    Amanda and Kim take a deeper look into some more color trends that define us this episode!

    As previously mentioned in 2016 Pantone, for the first time ever, chose TWO Colors of the Year: Rose Quartz (aka millennial pink) and Serenity (a lavender blue). Last episode we mentioned that Pantone wasn’t the forerunner anymore on trend - as Millennial Pink had been pervasive for a few years now.

    Pantone credits the blurring of gender for the choice - not mentioning the obvious obsession with the color: According to Pantone.”In many parts of the world we are experiencing a gender blur as it relates to fashion, which has in turn impacted color trends throughout all other areas of design."

    Amanda points out that these colors weren’t necessarily groundbreaking. These colors were also used together frequently in the early age of the internet,  found in both the Prodigy guidebook and the America Online welcome page.

    Rose Quartz (aka millennial pink) became the color of a generation, with Serenity as its sort of second runner up.

    Millennial Pink, also known as “Tumblr Pink” and “Scandi Pink” is not the same as Barbie pink, which was the pink shade of the aughts.  This was a softer, less aggressive shade….some considered it a modern take on the color.

    New York magazine did an exhaustive, almost too dry article>> on the history of millennial pink citing here in a lot of her research. The New York Mag fashion editor Amy Larocca said, “often when Pantone declares Marsala Red or Radiant Orchid to be the next color to watch, we shrug knowingly, fully expecting to see that shade on shelves but not expecting it to invade our consciousness.”

    But millennial pink was different...it  really did invade every aspect of clothing, graphic design, interior design, product design….it became a signature of the “blanding” aesthetic (refer to our episode on Blanding for MORE!)

    In November of 2014, the Color Marketing Group, a worldwide nonprofit color-forecasting group of which Pantone is a member, picked Shim, a deep pink-beige, as the 2016 emerging color (the group works two years in advance). It’s an early version of Millennial Pink. The Asia-Pacific members of the group are the first to notice the color and say that it represents a change in gender roles; the name Shim is a play on she and him. Mark Woodman, the former president of CMG, calls the color a “moment of quietude” and explains that “there’s so much stress that people think, What can I do in color and texture that I can take with me that gives me a moment to calm down?

    That same year, #palepink is the top used pink-related hashtag on Tumblr...a place that virtually birthed the pastel aesthetic!  And I would say that the kids of Tumblr really lead the this paste revolution with all of the pastel aesthetic blogs, pastel goth.

    Every brand--whether it’s clothing, kitchen goods, furniture, you name it...has gotten into the millennial pink game at some point. ...but strangely none of the big car companies have? WHAT A MISS. Probably why Millennials aren’t buying cars! (please refer to our episode on Millennials Killing things ;).

    Traditionally considered a color of our youth -or femme girl icons like Paris Hilton, Leagally Blonde or House Bunny -  it became popular beyond age, gender or taste. Fuelled by nostalgia and trend the color took over in a massive way.

    But millennial pink had a different, androgynous vibe.  It was considered the “genderless mascot” of a generation.  It’s also flattering and easy on the eyes, which doesn’t hurt!

    A few years ago Amanda read an amazing interview with one of her favorite bands, a Japanese girl band called Chai, who uses pink very heavily in its imagery and outfits!  This quote from member Yuki really stuck with her: “In Japan, most girls like pink when they’re little. There is this cultural understanding that when you’re a young girl, you can wear pink, but as you grow older, pink is not the color for you. What we are trying to say is that pink is for everybody at every age. We wanted people to know it’s a cool color and it shows woman power. Our pink outfits show we’re not just cute: This is what cool women wear.”


    People would ask...why pink? A traditionally polarizing color!


    In 1918, the trade publication Earnshaw’s Infants’ Department published an article saying, “The generally accepted rule is pink for the boys, and blue for the girls.”
    While this shade of pink is not new, it’s invasion of our consciousness and our surroundings began in earnest in 2013...so Amanda wanted to call out some iconic millennial pink moments:

    1. Glossier! It’s packaging, it’s products, the jumpsuits that its employees wear in the flagship store.
    2. The cover of Girlboss, Kim’s favorite book, and Sophia’s second book Nasty Galaxy
    3. The upper half of the Grand Budapest Hotel, the setting of the film by Wes Anderson
    4. Many subway cars in the Tokyo metro system are pink, sometimes to denote “women only” cars, but also just because science has proven that the color is so soothing to stressed out commuters.  They also created special soothing music for each station for the same reason!
    5. The cover of Drake’s Hot Line Bling...which inspired so many graphic tee knockoffs!
    6. The Wing used it as the primary color for its locations

    What colors do we see trending with Gen Z? 


    Gen Z Yellow was getting a lot of airplay in 2018 and a lot of people were hoping for another stand out color with the new generation that was swinging in with new market share and dollars at the ready. This year we see that the Pantone Color of the Year is in fact - Gen Z yellow. Will it eclipse Millennial Pink? Not likely!

    Nostalgic colors: 90’s colors and Y2K is trending

    • Billie Eilish makes a lot of moves with color choice and style  The New York Times, called Billie Eilish Gen Z’s fashion role model, suggesting it’s the “new generation’s rejection of the flirty babe aesthetic in favor of something more crazily improvised and less strenuously sexual.” She embraces Neons like UFO Green against statement blacks
    • 2000’s - on tick tock girls are recreating the look complete with butterfly clips and frosted lips.
    •     Seafoam / Aqua
    •     90’s Pink  - bubblegum
    •     Lavender

    Kindercore


    As we mentioned before whenever there is an existing mainstream trend,  there is often a counter trend that will resonate strongly as people get exhausted by the status quo. So this minimalism trend of clean design and neutral color has been popular for years. As an opposing trend and one that taps into the zeitgeist to alleviate the darkness of the times, many designers from interior to fashion are turning to a movement called Kindercore. It is essentially a happier aesthetic rooted in primary & bubblegum colors, geometric shapes as well a new movement into fun squiggly shapes reminiscent of being a kid or in your kindergarten classroom. In general COLOR itself is trending more as mentioned as a macro trend toward Maximalism is starting  to counterbalance out the years and years of minimalism. Maxamilism is trending like crazy right now with #maximalism having over 7.5 million views on TikTok.


    Kindercore plays on the design aesthetics inspired ...

    Jenilee Samuel- Fashion & Family

    Jenilee Samuel- Fashion & Family

    Jenilee Samuel is a pastor, podcaster, mom to 4 boys, and owner of J. Samuel Styling! Jenilee and I had the chance to talk about our hopes and dreams for our children and how she finds herself in positions to serve others. Then she and I dive into fashion! Body types, best styles to fit each one, and upcoming colors and fashion trends. This episode is just FUN!

    Contact Jenilee:
    www.jsamuelstyling.com
    J. Samuel Styling Instagram
    J. Samuel Styling Facebook
    Java with Jen Instagram
    Java with Jen Facebook



    #parenting #raisinggodlychildren #encouragment #encourageandobserve #encourageyourchildren #listentoyourchildren, #godsdirection #dreams #hopes #prayforyourchildren #raisingupagodlygeneration #styling #bodyshapes #pearshape #hourglassshape #appleshape #straightshape #triangleshape #fashiontrends #colortrends #leopardisaneutral #boundries #journeyofruth #journeyofruthpodcast #jsamuelstyling #javawithjen #podcasting #javawithjenpodcast #podcastingfun #fashion 

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    Feed the Leads - Eat the Rainbow: Graphic and Back-end Design

    Feed the Leads - Eat the Rainbow: Graphic and Back-end Design

    In this episode, Natalie Klein and Robert Wasiluk discuss graphic and back-end design. Because people process images faster than words, your communication must be beautiful as well as persuasive. Learn more about current color trends and why the back-end design such as meta descriptions, alt tags, is just as important as graphic design to set you apart from other professionals.

    2:00 Importance of page titles and meta descriptions

    2:32 Website maintenance, updates and backups

    3:02 ADA compliance

    4:07 GDPR compliance

    5:05 Why you need to clean up that emailing database

    5:50 Color trends

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