Color squares
Color Matters

How Color Affects Us

Symbolism & Emotions
Effects on the Body
Effects on Vision
Design & Art
Business & Marketing
Computers
Ecology & Usability
Amazing Science
Color Chatter
Hot Topics
Research

New !
Color Matters for Kids

  Fun Stuff


Factoids
The Color Police
Color Tales

  Express Yourself

Global Color Survey
Bulletin Board

  Resources

Where to Study Color
Bibliography
Links

  Who Is Color Matters


Who is ....
Color Matters in Art
Travels

 Blog & Newsletter

Blog
Blog Archive
Newsletter

  Other Color Matters

Color Matters Store
Color Voodoo Ebooks
Color Consultation
  
Make a Donation
  Home
       Table of Contents
.

ADVANCED SEARCH

We offer two options for searching: A basic search (at the top right corner of every web page) and an advanced search below. For best results, read the Search Tips at the bottom of this page.


Search For:
Match:  Any word All words Exact phrase
Sound-alike matching
Dated:
From: ,
To: ,
Within: 
Show:   results   summaries
Sort by: 

Search Tips

  • Check spelling - Make sure your search terms are spelled correctly. The search engine will attempt to find words that sound similar your search terms, but it is always best to spell the search terms correctly.

  • Use multiple words - Use multiple words when performing your search. More words for a search will return more refined results than a search from a single word. For example, appetite, effects, stimulate, food, color.

  • Use similar words - The more similar words you use in a search, the more relevant results will be to the words that you are searching for. For example, optics, vision, eyes, seeing.

  • Use appropriate capitalization - Use capitalization when looking for proper nouns such as the name of a person or place. Lowercase words will match any words of any case.

  • Use quotation marks around phrases - Use quotation marks to find words that must appear adjacent to each other within a phrase. For example, search for "color wheel" within quotes rather than just color, wheel.

  • Use Boolean plus (+) or minus (-) operators - Precede a search term or phrase with a plus (+) sign to indicate it must appear in a search result. Precede a search term with a minus (-) sign to indicate an undesirable search term or phrase that must not appear in a search result. For example, searching for +dogs -collie will return results that are about dogs, but not about collies.

  • Use field searches - Field searches allow you to search for words that appear in a specific part of a document such as the body text (body:), title text (title:), alt text (alt:), meta description (desc:), meta keywords (keys:) or URL (url:). The field name should include the colon and precede the search word or phrase with no spaces between them. For example, searching for title:presidents will find pages with presidents in the title of the page.

Searching for books about color?


Questions?


Color Matters is a registered trademark of J.L. Morton.
Graphics and Text: Copyright (c) 1995-2006, J.L.Morton, All rights reserved
   Advanced Search