Understanding color as a carrier of psychological and emotional meaning, and using chromatic choices to tell stories within designed systems.
The Heian court where Murasaki wrote was obsessed with color—the layers of graduated robes called juni-hitoe expressed season, rank, and emotional state through precise chromatic choices. Colors were not decorative but narrative: purple suggested nobility and spiritual depth, red indicated passion or shame, white conveyed purity or death. Modern design often treats color as superficial aesthetics, but Murasaki's tradition reveals its psychological depth. Every color choice communicates meaning, evokes emotional response, and shapes user experience at a pre-conscious level. Strategic color application becomes a tool for guiding attention, encoding information, expressing brand values, and creating psychological safety or excitement. The designer working with chromatic narrative asks: what emotional and psychological journey does my color palette create? How do these choices speak to the user's inner experience?
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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