andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2003-05-09 10:15 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Looks fine to me
Here you will find colourmatch, which takes a selected colour and gives you other colours that go well with it. I'm most impressed by how well it works - and I wonder what this tells us about the way the human eye/mind perceives colours.
no subject
Of course one must alway take into account the colour-blind (of all varieties) - who are surprisingly common.
I assume a 4(5) dimensional colour space is one where you try to find 4(5) harmonising colours???
no subject
One dimensional colour systems can be represented as a line, say from black through grey to white. Two dimensional can be represented as a flat surface. Three dimensional as a solid object. Four dimensional and five dimensional things are much more mind-boggling to visualise.
no subject
Are you saying that there are colours that you can't represent in RGB?? That seems right. The 3 colour CRT/LCD system is inherently not as flexible as the more analogue pigment colour system.
no subject
There are indeed colours that can't be represented adequately by RGB. Gold is a good one, although you can make a good approximation.
The colour space I ended up dealing with was designed to closely map human perception of colour. It was sodding horrible.