This study purposed to reveal differences in color emotions according to the emotional experience types of late-stage adolescents and use them as color emotion indicators in art therapy. To this end, 410 late teenagers in Korea were classified into four types of emotional experience(hot, cold, overwhelmed, cerebral) using a Google web-based mobile survey system, and the results were derived by comparing and analyzing the color emotions for 12 colors. As a result of the study, red, purple, brown, grey, and black showed negative emotions in all four types, while orange, yellow, yellow-green, green, pink, and white showed positive emotions. Only blue showed positive emotions in the ‘hot’, and ‘overwhelmed’ type, while the ‘cold’, and ‘cerebral’ types showed negative emotions. The ‘hot’, and ‘overwhelmed’ types showed higher positive emotions in blue, while the ‘cold’ types showed lower positive emotions in orange, yellow, and yellow-green. The ‘hot’ type showed higher negative emotions in brown and black, and the ‘overwhelming’ type showed higher negative emotions in black. The ‘hot’ type showed higher positive emotions in chromatic, primary, and warm colors, while the ‘cold’ type showed lower positive emotions. The ‘cerebral’ type represented warm and cold colors, orange and blue as positive and negative emotions, while other types showed ambiguous color emotions. Based on these contents, the significance and limitations of this study were discussed.