COLOR

effect produced on the eye and its associated nerves by light waves of different wavelength or frequency. Light transmitted from an object to the eye stimulates the different color cones of the retina, thus making possible perception of various colors in the object.

See also light; painting; protective coloration; vision.

The Visible Spectrum

Since the colors that compose sunlight or white light have different wavelengths, the speed at which they travel through a medium such as glass differs; red light, having the longest wavelength, travels more rapidly through glass than blue light, which has a shorter wavelength. Therefore, when white light passes through a glass prism, it is separated into a band of colors called a spectrum. The colors of the visible spectrum, called the elementary colors, are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet (in that order).

Apparent Color of Objects

Color is a property of light that depends on wavelength. When light falls on an object, some of it is absorbed and some is reflected. The apparent color of an opaque object depends on the wavelength of the light that it reflects; e.g., a red object observed in daylight appears red because it reflects only the waves producing red light. The color of a transparent object is determined by the wavelength of the light transmitted by it. An opaque object that reflects all wavelengths appears white; one that absorbs all wavelengths appears black. Black and white are not generally considered true colors; black is said to result from the absence of color, and white from the presence of all colors mixed together.

Additive Colors

Colors whose beams of light in various combinations can produce any of the color sensations are called primary, or spectral, colors. The process of combining these colors is said to be "additive"; i.e., the sensations produced by different wavelengths of light are added together. The additive primaries are red, green, and blue-violet. White can be produced by combining all three primary colors. Any two colors whose light together produces white are called complementary colors, e.g., yellow and blue-violet, or red and blue-green.

Subtractive Colors

When pigments are mixed, the resulting sensations differ from those of the transmitted primary colors. The process in this case is "subtractive," since the pigments subtract or absorb some of the wavelengths of light. Magenta (red-violet), yellow, and cyan (blue-green) are called subtractive primaries, or primary pigments. A mixture of blue and yellow pigments yields green, the only color not absorbed by one pigment or the other. A mixture of the three primary pigments produces black.

Properties of Colors

The scientific description of color, or colorimetry, involves the specification of all relevant properties of a color either subjectively or objectively. The subjective description gives the hue, saturation, and lightness or brightness of a color. Hue refers to what is commonly called color, i.e., red, green, blue-green, orange, etc. Saturation refers to the richness of a hue as compared to a gray of the same brightness; in some color notation systems, saturation is also known as chroma. The brightness of a light source or the lightness of an opaque object is measured on a scale ranging from dim to bright for a source or from black to white for an opaque object (or from black to colorless for a transparent object). In some systems, brightness is called value. A subjective color notation system provides comparison samples of colors rated according to these three properties. In an objective system for color description, the corresponding properties are dominant wavelength, purity, and luminance. Much of the research in objective color description has been carried out in cooperation with the Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage (CIE), which has set standards for such measurements. In addition to the description of color according to these physical and psychological standards, a number of color-related physiological and psychological phenomena have been studied. These include color constancy under varying viewing conditions, color contrast, afterimages, and advancing and retreating colors.

Symbolic Uses of Color

Color has long been used to represent affiliations and loyalties (e.g., school or regimental colors) and as a symbol of various moods (e.g., red with rage) and qualities (e.g., worthy of a blue ribbon). A well-known use of the symbolism of color is in the liturgical colors of the Western Church, according to which the color of the vestments varies through the ecclesiastical calendar; e.g., purple (i.e., violet) is the color of Advent and Lent; white, of Easter; and red, of the feasts of the martyrs.

Bibliography

See G. Wyszecki and W. S. Stiles, Color Science (1967); M. W. Levine and J. M. Shefner, Fundamentals of Sensation and Perception (1991).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Alice Walker Countee Cullen Psychology of Color The Color Purple
 

books on: Color  - 40789 results

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Color and Consciousness Color and Consciousness An Essay in Metaphysics CHARLES LANDESMAN...Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Landesman, Charles. Color and consciousness: an essay in metaphysics / Charles Landesman. p...
COLOR PSYCHOLOGY AND COLOR THERAPY COLOR PSYCHOLOGY and COLOR THERAPY A Factual Study of the INFLUENCE OF COLOR ON HUMAN LIFE By Faber Birren UNIVERSITY BOOKS, Inc. New Hyde Park, New York Copyright 1961 by Faber Birren...
CREATIVE COLOR CREATIVE COLOR FABER BIRREN REINHOLD PUBLISHING CORPORATION NEW YORK Acknowledgments...1. Prelude to the Academic 9 2. Color Terms 12 3. Color Circles...
FORM AND COLOR IN GREEK PAINTING Also by Vincent J. Bruno...History VINCENT J. BRUNO FORM AND COLOR IN GREEK PAINTING W W Norton...Publication Data Bruno, Vincent J Form and color in Greek painting. Bibliography: p. Includes...
...Interpretations Alice Walkers The Color Purple Edited and with an introduction...Cataloging-in-Publication Data Alice Walkers The color purple / edited and with an intro duction...alk. paper 1. Walker, Alice, 1944 - Color purple. 2. Afro-American woman in literature...
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Influence of Color Word Availability on the Stroop Color-naming Effect by Hyosun Kim , Yang Seok Cho , Motonori...Eriksen, 1974), the Simon task (Simon, 1990), and the Stroop color-naming task (Stroop, 1935), among others. In these tasks...
Color-based Grouping and Inhibition in Visual Search: Evidence...examined by Watson and Humphreys ( 1997), who took a standard color-form conjunction search task (see, e.g., Treisman Gelade, 1980) and presented distractors in one color 1 sec before the presentation of the target and the second...
Direct Selection by Color for Visual Encoding by Esther Vierck...offer significant benefits for selection. Color is another feature that has been examined...The results of studies in which target color was cued have indicated that advance color...
Impaired Color Word Processing at an Unattended Location: Evidence from a Stroop...of the irrelevant property. For example, in the classic Stroop color-naming task, a colored color word is presented, and participants are to name the color in which...
Shades of brown: the law of skin color. by Trina Jones Because antidiscrimination...racial classifications on the basis of skin color. In this Article, Professor Jones brings...historical and contemporary significance of skin color in the United States. She argues that discrimination...
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Monochrome Color Prints from BLACK WHITE Negatives...by printing black-and-white negatives on color printing paper, it is possible to obtain...interesting, and pleasing colors by doing so. The color produced in a single print is monochrome...
COLOR: Science and Magic by Christina Heiniger Color is both magical and scientific. The study of color engages students scientifically as they explore certain formulas for mixing and producing colors...
Primed for Color. by Wayne Kennedy GO OVER TO YOUR TELEVISION set, turn down the color control, sit back in your chair, and take an...attention elsewhere. We have become a nation of color. Since the early 1960s color television has...
Unlocking the Color of White. by Duane Sabiston Teaching students how to unlock the color of white is my passion. Like so many other art teachers, I struggled for years teaching color wheels and making value scales, only to be...
Digital color printing: part 2 of 2, color analysis by Russell A. Rohde Color Perception Color (or hue), according to Websters New World Dictionary, 1988, is "the sensation resulting from stimulation of the retina of the eye by light...
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...Earns BLI "Picks" Nod for Top-Performing Color Printers. HP has passed the recent battery of rigorous lab tests on color printers and printer MFPs with flying...2009 ldquo;Pick rdquo; awards in the color printer category. The tests evaluate...
HP Color LaserJet Enterprise CP4520 Printer Series. Offering powerful performance, advanced onboard security, outstanding color print quality and legendary reliability, the HP Color LaserJet Enterprise CP4520 Printer series, is easy to manage...
OPTICAL ILLUSIONS; Color Field Show Falls Flat. Byline: Deborah...circles and blobs fill the huge canvases of "Color as Field," a new exhibit at the Smithsonian...painting altogether. Rather than present the color-field paintings in relationship to those...
HP Makes Move to Drive Color in the Mainstream; Outlines Strategy, Partners and Solutions to Expand Digital Color Usage for Business. Byline: RED R...opportunities offered by the growth in digital color printing as the fuel that will drive the...
Is It the Color That Attracts All the Attention? Byline...wonder, is there a correlation between car color and speeding tickets? Sgt. Thornnie Rouse...that he has seen no correlation between car color and citations for speeding violations...
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encyclopedia articles on: Color  - 841 results

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COLOR effect produced on the eye and its associated nerves...transmitted from an object to the eye stimulates the different color cones of the retina, thus making possible perception of various...green, blue, indigo, and violet (in that order). Apparent Color of Objects Color is a property of light that depends on...
COLOR BLINDNESS visual defect resulting in the inability to distinguish colors. About 8% of men and 0.5% of women experience some difficulty in color perception. Color blindness is usually an inherited sex-linked characteristic, transmitted through, but recessive in, females. Acquired...
COLOR INDEX in astronomy, difference in an objects brightness as recorded between any...using optical filters of different colors. If blue and red filters are used, then the color index B-R would be zero for a white star ( spectral class A0). The color index is positive for stars redder than a white star and negative for stars bluer than...
COLOR-FIELD PAINTING abstract art movement that originated...Coming after the abstract expressionism of the 1950s, color-field painting represents a sharp change from the earlier...the works of Willem de Kooning , elements of cubism . Color-field artists moved toward a more impersonal and austerely...
FOUR-COLOR PROCESS see printing . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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