CIE Chromaticity Diagram
CIE Chromaticity Diagram
CIE Chromaticity Diagram
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includes all of the perceived hues and provides a framework for investigating color.
CIE concepts
Color measurement The diagram given here is associated with the 1931 CIE concepts standard. Revisions were made in 1960 and 1976, but the 1931 version remains the most widely used version. The diagram at lower left is a rough rendering of the 1931 CIE colors on the chromaticity diagram. Diagram with Associate annotation with colors The 1976 CIE Chromaticity Diagram
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On the CIE chromaticity CIE diagram at left, some concepts annotation is made about the significance of different Color parts of the diagram. The measurement boundary represents maximum saturation for the concepts spectral colors, and the diagram forms the boundary of all perceivable hues. Calculation of coordinates
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Approximate colors can be assigned to areas on the CIE Chromaticity Diagram. These are rough categories, and not to be taken as precise statements of color. The boundaries and the
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color names are adapted from Brand Fortner, "Number by Color", Part 5, SciTech Journal 6, p32, May/June 1996.
245 216
220 119 204 184 224 231 233 214 209 163 162 164 175 138 121 102 85 64 208 35 65 255
208 51 162 29 0 94 0 4 60 71 121 190 199 202 191 177 158 143 219 132 136 255 Index CIE concepts Color measurement concepts
Any attempt to depict the gamut of human color Orange 240 vision on a computer monitor must be pink accompanied by numerous qualifications and exceptions. In the first place, you cannot display Orange 228 the range of human color perception on an RGB Yellowish 231 monitor - the gamut of normal human vision orange covers the entire CIE diagram while the gamut Yellow 234 of an RGB monitor can be displayed as a Greenish triangular region within the CIE diagram. 235 yellow Another qualification is that the hue and saturation associated with a given color name Yellow 185 can vary over a considerable range. Add to that green the variations with different kinds of display Yellowish monitors, and you rightly conclude that an 170 green accurate rendition is impossible. With all those excuses, however, it still might be instructive to Green 0 provide a rough idea of the regions of the CIE Bluish Diagram associated with common color names. 24 green The display here was created by choosing Bluegreen 95 representative RGB values for the color regions Greenish from a rendition of the 1976 CIE Chromaticity 110 blue Diagram provided by Photo Research, Inc. Note that one representative value in about the Blue 92 middle of the hue and saturation ranges was Purplish chosen for each section of the diagram. The 88 blue point chosen was just a visual judgment of a Bluish representative color in the range. The RGB 92 purple values obtained are listed in the table at right. A different observer would likely have chosen Purple 246 different points to represent the color names, but Reddish at least these values might provide a starting 196 purple point for preferred variations. One characteristic of the commonly used 1931 CIE Chromaticity Diagram that is evident even from this crude portrayal is that the green takes up far too much of the landscape compared to the number of visually different colors in the region. That was one of the shortcomings that the 1960 and 1976 revisions sought to address. Purplish pink Red purple Purplish red White 243 175 209 255
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