
If you're looking for manga similar to Telling Through the Colors, you might like these titles.
'Choi Hwan' is a promising young pianist both at home and abroad. However, in reality, he is just a 15-year-old boy confused by the identity his mother created for him. One day before a competition, Choi Hwan's improvisation, as if pouring out his frustration in the school's music room, shakes the heart and mind of his classmate, Hwang Ina, who coincidentally passes by in hallway. Ina, who has a special talent for art, wants to formally study art but is struggling with her family's difficult circumstances and her own heart that she herself can't even figure out. Ina paints the emotions of that day, Choi Hwan sees it, and the two become intertwined through fate.
Gyeo-Wul, an art student, is having trouble drawing. One day, she bumps into a handsome guy and takes his notebook by mistake. The notebook had drawings with an art style she is not used to and tries to draw better than him. But, it turns out that the guy knows who she is...!
A man who paints a breakup, and a woman who expresses love, their inseparable love and parting story.
Gyeo-Wul is back with Hyeon-Seok for this sequel to Pink Lady! Join them as they leave the hustle and bustle of everyday life behind, and embark on an alternate reality art history adventure through time.
Yeonkwang Arts High School makes a clear distinction between the talented and the mediocre. The talented receive full benefits of the Gifted and Talented program—funding, training, opportunities to participate in exclusive art contests—while the mediocre are left to fend for themselves in the hopes that they, too, can one day make it into the prestigious program. Talent equals power in this competitive school, but when Chung-eun, a G/T student, falls for Yumi, a non-G/T student, the tables are turned. While Chung-eun is blinded by Yumi’s charms, Yumi’s got a hidden agenda.
Sunah, the daughter of a rich family, is trying to transform her mother's failing art museum. She soon encounters art restorer Inho, who disagrees with her methods. As he tries to convince her that restoration is often better than a complete do-over, the two begin to fall in love.
Okumoto Momo is a first year student at an art school living on her own although she's close to her family. She's studying art to follow in the footsteps of her father, who left his wife and three children (Momo is the youngest) some years back. One day her mother summons her and her siblings home to say that their father has resurfaced, sending divorce papers to their mother. It's a bit of a surprise, but he's been gone a long time and everyone is used to it.
Yumeji's popularity has been rising due to the success of his art book, despite his wife's dispute with Tamaki, but he was cut off as a western-style painter and suffers between his family and his lover. Kazuo Kamimura's homage to Yumeji Takehisa, who had been a admiring since he was a boy, this work is the first book to be recorded with the unreleased and unfinished eighth episode whose serialization was interrupted due to the bankruptcy of the publisher.