Tone

Plural: Tones

Tone definition

  1. Tone In painting and visual art, tone refers to the lightness or darkness of a color, often used interchangeably with value. More broadly, tone describes the overall range and relationship of light and dark areas within an artwork.
  2. In color theory, a mix of tint and shade: a color that has been modified by adding gray, reducing its intensity without changing its basic hue. In the tint–tone–shade system, tone represents a neutralized version of a color.

Examples

  • “Adding gray to red creates a muted red tone.”
  • “The palette uses soft tones to avoid strong, saturated colors.”
  • “Skin colors are often built using subtle tones rather than pure hues.”

Context

Definition 1

Used as synonymous of value as color.

Definition 2

In color theory, tone sits between tint (color + white) and shade (color + black). It is especially important in painting because it helps create natural, realistic colors, avoiding artificial saturation. Many real-world colors are tones rather than pure hues, since light and atmosphere tend to neutralize color.

Core Principles


Derivation

From Latin tonus, meaning tension or tone, via Greek tonos, referring to pitch or intensity. The term evolved in art to describe variations in light and dark.

See also