Color solid

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Colour solid
)

Color solid of the entire .

A color solid is the three-dimensional representation of a color space or model and can be thought as an analog of, for example, the one-dimensional color wheel, which depicts the variable of hue (red, yellow, green, blue, magenta, etc.); or the two-dimensional chromaticity diagram, which depicts the variables of hue and colorfulness (either chroma or saturation). The added spatial dimension allows a color solid to depict the three dimensions of color: lightness (gradations of light and dark, tints or shades), hue, and colorfulness, allowing the solid to depict all conceivable colors in an organized three-dimensional structure.

Organization

Exterior view of color sphere of Albert Henry Munsell, 1900. This is actually a drawing of a physical model that was manufactured and sold.
Interior cross section of Munsell's color sphere and color tree, 1915.
Philipp Otto Runge’s Farbenkugel (color sphere), 1810, showing the surface of the sphere (top two images), and horizontal and vertical cross sections (bottom two images).
Color sphere of Johannes Itten, 1919-20. A much clearer representation of his model appears in The Art of Color, 1961, which cannot be reproduced here for copyright reasons.
Color sphere modeled in salt dough by Jesse Hensel, 2011.
Section of Hensel's sphere revealing a color spectrum.
  • Vertical cross sections of various spherically-shaped color solids
  • Philipp Otto Runge's Farbenkugel
    Philipp Otto Runge's Farbenkugel
  • Albert Henry Munsell's color sphere
    Albert Henry Munsell's color sphere
  • Johannes Itten's color sphere
    Johannes Itten's color sphere
  • Spherical coordinate system (for comparison)

Different color theorists have each designed unique color solids. Many are in the shape of a

Phillip Otto Runge and Johannes Itten are typical examples and prototypes for many other color solid schematics.[2]

Pure, saturated hues of equal brightness are located around the equator at the periphery of the color sphere. As in the color wheel,

gray
. Moving vertically in the color sphere, colors become lighter (toward the top) and darker (toward the bottom). At the upper pole, all hues meet in white; at the bottom pole, all hues meet in black.

The vertical axis of the color sphere, then, is gray all along its length, varying from black at the bottom to white at the top. All pure (saturated) hues are located on the surface of the sphere, varying from light to dark down the color sphere. All impure (unsaturated hues, created by mixing contrasting colors) comprise the sphere's interior, likewise varying in brightness from top to bottom.

Usage

HSL color models
—in a single schematic, using it as an aid in the composition and analysis of visual art.

Color volume

The .

Color volume is the set of all available color at all available hue, saturation and brightness.[3][4] It's the result of a 2D color space or 2D color gamut (that represent chromaticity) combined with the dynamic range.[5][6][7]

The term has been used to describe

wider color gamut than Rec. 709 / sRGB).[3][5][8][9][10]

See also

References

External links