Color Notation

Color Notation

by Albert Henry Munsell

15 chapters3h 37mEnglish1905

About this book

A Color Notation is a method developed by A. H. Munsell in order to produce a unified system of color classification. The system identifies three color dimensions hue (color name), value (lightness), and chroma (color purity) and was the first to base the outcome on a scientifically rigorous method of testing humans' color vision. The three dimensions are depicted on a color sphere with pure hue changing around the equator, value changing from light to dark from the north to the south pole, and chroma varying on the inside of the sphere towards the neutral grey of the north-south axis. The Munsell system is still widely used today, for example to define skin and hair colors for forensic pathology, for matching soil colors, or for the selection of shades for dental restorations. (Summary by Availle).

Chapters (14)

1Part I I: Color Names
964
2Appendix 1
250
3II: Color Qualities
1607
4Appendix 2
145
5III: Color Mixture
1775
6Appendix 3
418
7IV: Prismatic Colors
732
8Appendix 4
890
9V: The Pigment Color Sphere
1345
10Appendix 5
198
11VI: Color Notation
694
12VII: Color Harmony
1422
13Part II: A Color System and Course of Study
1317
14Glossary of Color Terms
942

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