Hi,
I dream of a CPC custom set, and even I have already started to save (and discard…) dozens of sets in the mockup tool, I realise it will be a long haul before my tastes are refined enough and I could pull the trigger in good conscience without second doubt (Not a chance… I already suspect it will only make me want a second one).
I am in the accumulate-assimilate phase, looking for a ton of inspiration around here. Thank you all for that, it is invaluable.
While they are certainly a myriad of splendid sets with lots of "random" colours that match (more or less) well, I am drawn for now toward sets with limited colours, carefully selected to avoid problems, and/or distributed between chips and spots in a "logical" systematic way.
For example, @PokerChipsDesign Gemini set is a fantastic example: it works with 5 colours on 4 chips, creating a gorgeous coherent-cohesive set that is simple and sophisticated at the same time. Love it.
The progression of colours is the first I see that is systematic: 1-2, 2-1-3, 3-2-4-5, 4-5, using not only a limited colour palette, but distributing them from one chip to the next.
Do you have more examples of this kind of colour experiment?
Thanks in advance!
I dream of a CPC custom set, and even I have already started to save (and discard…) dozens of sets in the mockup tool, I realise it will be a long haul before my tastes are refined enough and I could pull the trigger in good conscience without second doubt (Not a chance… I already suspect it will only make me want a second one).
I am in the accumulate-assimilate phase, looking for a ton of inspiration around here. Thank you all for that, it is invaluable.
While they are certainly a myriad of splendid sets with lots of "random" colours that match (more or less) well, I am drawn for now toward sets with limited colours, carefully selected to avoid problems, and/or distributed between chips and spots in a "logical" systematic way.
For example, @PokerChipsDesign Gemini set is a fantastic example: it works with 5 colours on 4 chips, creating a gorgeous coherent-cohesive set that is simple and sophisticated at the same time. Love it.
The progression of colours is the first I see that is systematic: 1-2, 2-1-3, 3-2-4-5, 4-5, using not only a limited colour palette, but distributing them from one chip to the next.
Do you have more examples of this kind of colour experiment?
Thanks in advance!