Silver has represented the devious actions of Judas and gleaming armour that's now rusted.
Post-classical history. During the Post-Classical period, yellow became firmly established as the color of Judas Iscariot, the disciple who betrayed Jesus Christ, even though the Bible never describes his clothing. From this connection, yellow also took on associations with envy, jealousy and duplicity.
Overall, the blue color scheme was perceived as most trustworthy and black as least trustworthy.
Along with warmth and happiness, yellow also represents cowardliness and deceit.
The three main colors most often used in manipulation tactics are: red, orange and blue. The color red creates a strong emotional response like passion or love.
Black is a primary color across all models of color space. In Western culture, it is considered a negative color and usually symbolizes death, grief, or evil but also depression.
The results of the RGB colour model revealed that guilt was most commonly associated with red, black, green, and violet colours. However, the colours of immoral behaviours were much darker than the colours of environmentally unfriendly behaviours.
Dark red is associated with vigor, willpower, rage, anger, leadership, courage, longing, malice, and wrath.
Red-green and yellow-blue are the so-called "forbidden colors." Composed of pairs of hues whose light frequencies automatically cancel each other out in the human eye, they're supposed to be impossible to see simultaneously.
Gray lie. Most of the lies we tell are gray lies.
Culturally: In the Christian religion, grey is the color of ash, and thus a Biblical symbol of mourning and remorse.
Betrayal is the sense of being harmed by the intentional actions or omissions of a trusted person. The most common forms of betrayal are harmful disclosures of confidential information, disloyalty, infidelity, dishonesty. They can be traumatic and cause considerable distress.
In early Christian art, cats were seen as symbols of both lust and betrayal.
“Red” “Red” was indicated among the top three colors for anger, followed by jealousy, fear, and envy, respectively (Figure 2).
That being said, color psychology attributes orange to selfishness and opportunism, so make of it what you will.
Red. This is the color of aggression and passion—great for a first date, not so great for the office. It also increases metabolism and raises blood pressure, which is why it's used for stop signs and fire engines. Red can be seen as a bit hostile in the work environment, so think twice before wearing it often.
Casimir and Schnegg (2002) found that the colour red was associated with shame in 78 of the 98 languages they surveyed; of the 78, 51 also associated red with anger and 48 associated it with rage.
Dark orange can mean deceit and distrust.
For some, a dark colour like black or dark green could signify revenge because it can indicate darkness, mystery and anger. For other people, a bright colour like red or orange could represent revenge because it can signify anger, rage and violence.
Positive meanings of orange include warmth, energy, youthfulness, health and adventure. The most common negative associations of the color include crassness, rudeness and frivolity. Dark orange: Darker shades of orange seem to have the most negative associations, such as untrustworthiness and deceitfulness.
According to theory behind color, red is associated with violence and yellow is associated with insecurity.
Pink is the most calming of all colors -- often our most dangerous criminals are housed in pink cells as studies show that the color drains energy and calms aggression.