A tinted graph is a graph whose arcs are colored with certain colors. A colored graph is a graph whose vertices are colored with certain colors. If M is the set of tinted (or colored tinted) graphs of order k and G is a tinted (or colored tinted) graph, then we shall say that G is M-regular (or M-regularly colored) if all its subgraphs of order k belong to M. We shall show how, for any formula p of the first-order predicate calculus, to construct a finite set Bp of tinted graphs of order 3 and a finite set Cp of colored tinted graphs of order 2 such that ¦-p if and only if there exists a Bp-regular tinted graph not admitting a Cp-regular coloring. Hadwiger's conjecture (HC) is as follows: If no subgraph of a graph without loops G is contractible to a complete graph of order n, then the vertices of G can be colored in n−1 colors such that neighboring vertices are colored with different colors. We construct a formula X of the first-order predicate calculus such that HC is equivalent with ⌉⊢X. Thus, HC reduces to HC1: if all subgraphs of order 3 of the tinted graph G belong to BX, then G is CX-regularly colorable. Here BX and CX are specific finite sets of tinted graphs of order 3 and colored tinted graphs of order 2, respectively.