Content: <br>Chapter 1 Sources of Color (pages 1β16): <br>Chapter 2 What Is Color and How Did We Come to Experience It? (pages 17β25): <br>Chapter 3 From Light to Color (pages 26β36): <br>Chapter 4 Color Perception: Phenomena (pages 37β52): <br>Chapter 5 Orderly Arrangements of Color (pages 53β77):
Color: An Introduction to Practice and Principles, Third Edition
β Scribed by Rolf G. Kuehni(auth.)
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 281
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The one-stop reference to the essentials of color science and technology?now fully updated and revised
The fully updated Third Edition of Color: An Introduction to Practice and Principles continues to provide a truly comprehensive, non-mathematical introduction to color science, complete with historical, philosophical, and art-related topics.
Geared to non-specialists and experts alike, Color clearly explains key technical concepts concerning light, human vision, and color perception phenomena. It covers color order systems in depth, examines color reproduction technologies, and reviews the history of color science as well as its relationship to art and color harmony. Revised throughout to reflect the latest developments in the field, the Third Edition:
- Features many new color illustrations, now fully incorporated into the text
- Offers new perspectives on what color is all about, diverging from conventional thinking
- Includes new information on perception phenomena, color order, and technological advances
- Updates material on such topics as the CIE colorimetric system and optimal object colors
- Extends coverage of color reproduction to display systems, photography, and color management
- Contains a unique timetable of color in science and art, plus a glossary of important terms
Praise for the previous editions:
"A nice bridge to areas usually not covered in academic visual science programs . . . outstanding."
?Joel Pokorny, visual scientist at The University of Chicago
"A good addition to any library, this should be useful for the color interests of artists, designers, craftsmen, philosophers, psychologists, color technologies, and students in related fields."
?CHOICE
Content:
Chapter 1 Sources of Color (pages 1β21):
Chapter 2 What Is Color and How Did We Come to Experience It? (pages 23β36):
Chapter 3 From Light to Color (pages 37β49):
Chapter 4 Color Perception Phenomena (pages 51β78):
Chapter 5 Orderly Arrangements of Color (pages 79β112):
Chapter 6 Defining the Color Stimulus (pages 113β130):
Chapter 7 Calculating Color (pages 131β149):
Chapter 8 Colorants and Their Mixture (pages 151β166):
Chapter 9 Color Reproduction (pages 167β186):
Chapter 10 The Web of Color (pages 187β217):
Chapter 11 Color (Theory) in Art (pages 219β241):
Chapter 12 Harmony of Colors (pages 243β256):
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