Describing Colors
There
are so many different colors and shades of colors that a system
needed to be devised to differentiate between the different colors.
Albert Munsell invented the Munsell system to measure colors. Hue
is used to discriminate one color from another, for instance red
from yellow, or from blue, etc. There are 10 different Hues in
the Munsell system (Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, Purple, and the ones
in between). Each hue has a gradient from 1 to 10, a gradient of
5 being the middle ground. So 5R represents a color Red which is
neither strong nor weak.
To further discriminate between colors, a value is given
to a color. This value describes the degree of whiteness or blackness
that a color possesses (0 being black, 10 being white, neither of
which can ever be reached). A pink color, which is a Light red,
would be represented as 5R8. The 5R represents
the hue measurement, and the 8 above the horizontal line shows that
the red color has a high degree of whiteness.
The last part of the Munsell system involves the strength
of the color. Color strength is known as chroma. Chroma is represented
by an even number between 0 and 16. The number 0 represents no
chroma, and is the color gray. The chroma number is written under
the horizontal line of the value number. The problem involved with
Chroma is that chroma steps vary for different colors (because some
colors are just stronger than others).
These numbers (value and chroma) are then used to determine
the power of the color. Power is the product of the value number,
and chroma number. A higher power means that the color has a greater
effect. So, the most powerful red, is 5R414,
which has a power of 56.
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