nottingham_2 {unicol} | R Documentation |
Supporting colours of the University of Nottingham, England/UK
Description
nottingham_2
provides the nine supporting colours and five corresponding tints
(per colour) of the University of Nottingham, England/UK.
Usage
nottingham_2
Format
An object of class character
of length 54.
Details
The supporting colours are accents. They add warmth and vibrancy and can elevate designs.
Inspired by the University of Nottingham campus,
key brand messages and the city of Nottingham, nine colours build up
the palette to complement the primary Nottingham blue
(see nottingham_1
).
The supporting palette should be used sparingly, with a maximum of two supporting colours in any one asset.
Where colour is used within an asset, Nottingham blue
needs to be visually dominant and
the supporting palette should be less than half of the make-up of colour within the asset.
Supporting colours can and should be used for campaigns and initiatives, to help audience recognition and aid navigation.
Users must choose the correct colour output for the asset and its usage (RGB for digital and CMYK for print), as values have been created to keep the most vibrancy in print and the best colour representation across digital channels.
Each colour has five tints that can also be used for variety and to assist legibility. HEX codes have been provided for each tint, and these should be used when creating digital artwork, rather than using opacity.
nottingham_2
uses the HEX color definitions.
Value
A named vector of colours (HEX/HTML codes of type character).
Author(s)
unicol, 2023-09-04.
Source
Colour definitions are based on the UoN's Colour guidelines.
See Also
nottingham_1
for primary colours of the University of Nottingham;
nottingham_3
for neutral colours of the University of Nottingham;
seecol
for viewing and comparing colour palettes;
usecol
for using colour palettes;
simcol
for finding similar colours;
newpal
for defining new colour palettes;
grepal
for finding named colours.
Other UK university color palettes:
nottingham_1
,
nottingham_3
Examples
nottingham_2
main_cols <- seq(1, 49, by = 6)
unikn::seecol(nottingham_2[main_cols], main = "Main supporting colors of UoN")