Fr. 338.40

Principles of Colour and Appearance Measurement - Object Appearance, Colour Perception and Instrumental Measurement

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

Informationen zum Autor Dr. Asim Kumar Roy Choudhury is presently working as principal, KPS Institute of Polytechnic, Belmuri. He retired as Professor and HOD (Textile) from the Government College of Engineering and Textile Technology, Serampore (W.B.), India. He has over 30 years' experience in textile coloration and finishing in academia and industry, and has written numerous papers and several books on the subject, including the recently published two-volume work Principles of Colour and Appearance Measurement. Klappentext Understanding how consumers perceive colour, how colour can be measured and managed to match consumer expectations is both critical and complex. Written by one of the foremost authorities in the field, this major two-volume work addresses the key topics required to understand the issues and manage colour effectively. The first volume addresses how objects appear to viewers and how they perceive colour. It also reviews the major types of instrumentation used to measure colour. This book will be a valuable reference for a range of readers including designers, colour technologists, colour quality inspectors, product developers and anyone who uses colour in their work. Inhaltsverzeichnis Author contact details Woodhead Publishing Series in Textiles 1. Characteristics of light sources Abstract: 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Process of visual perception 1.3 Optics 1.4 Radiometry 1.5 Photometry 1.6 Black-body radiation 1.7 Colour temperature 1.8 Different light sources 1.9 Illuminants 1.10 Luminous efficacy of lamps 1.11 Colour rendering 1.12 References 2. Object appearance and colour Abstract: 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Interaction of light with objects 2.3 Reflection 2.4 Scattering 2.5 Refraction 2.6 Transmission and absorption 2.7 Mechanisms of colour generation 2.8 References 3. Colour and appearance attributes Abstract: 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Physical and psychophysical attributes 3.3 Gloss 3.4 Retroreflection 3.5 Transparency 3.6 Colour attributes 3.7 Assessment of colour appearance 3.8 Total appearance concept 3.9 Emotional aspects of colour 3.10 Colour combination schemes 3.11 Emotional aspects of colour combinations 3.12 References 4. Principles of colour perception Abstract: 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Analysis of sun radiation 4.3 Principles of colour mixing 4.4 Colour matching experiment 4.5 CIE 2° standard observer functions 4.6 CIE 10° standard observer functions 4.7 Transformation of primaries 4.8 The human vision system 4.9 The remarkable properties of the eye 4.10 Colour vision theories 4.11 References 5. Unusual visual phenomena and colour blindness Abstract: 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Unusual visual phenomena 5.3 Variation in colour vision 5.4 Defective colour vision 5.5 Yellowness of vision 5.6 References 6. Colour measurement instruments Abstract: 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Measuring instruments 6.3 Video cameras for colour measurement 6.4 Components of colour measuring instruments 6.5 Measuring geometry 6.6 Direct versus reverse optics 6.7 Sample preparation and presentation 6.8 Sources of error 6.9 Future trends 6.10 References 7. Using instruments to quantify colour Abstract: 7.1 Colorimetry 7.2 Colour space 7.3 Reflectance of object 7.4 CIE tristimulus colour space 7.5 Chromaticity 7.6 Chromaticity diagram 7.7 Dominant wavelength and excitation purity 7.8 CIE object colour solid 7.9 Advantages and disadvantages of CIE t...

List of contents

Author contact details
Woodhead Publishing Series in Textiles
1. Characteristics of light sources
Abstract:
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Process of visual perception
1.3 Optics
1.4 Radiometry
1.5 Photometry
1.6 Black-body radiation
1.7 Colour temperature
1.8 Different light sources
1.9 Illuminants
1.10 Luminous efficacy of lamps
1.11 Colour rendering
1.12 References
2. Object appearance and colour
Abstract:
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Interaction of light with objects
2.3 Reflection
2.4 Scattering
2.5 Refraction
2.6 Transmission and absorption
2.7 Mechanisms of colour generation
2.8 References
3. Colour and appearance attributes
Abstract:
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Physical and psychophysical attributes
3.3 Gloss
3.4 Retroreflection
3.5 Transparency
3.6 Colour attributes
3.7 Assessment of colour appearance
3.8 Total appearance concept
3.9 Emotional aspects of colour
3.10 Colour combination schemes
3.11 Emotional aspects of colour combinations
3.12 References
4. Principles of colour perception
Abstract:
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Analysis of sun radiation
4.3 Principles of colour mixing
4.4 Colour matching experiment
4.5 CIE 2° standard observer functions
4.6 CIE 10° standard observer functions
4.7 Transformation of primaries
4.8 The human vision system
4.9 The remarkable properties of the eye
4.10 Colour vision theories
4.11 References
5. Unusual visual phenomena and colour blindness
Abstract:
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Unusual visual phenomena
5.3 Variation in colour vision
5.4 Defective colour vision
5.5 Yellowness of vision
5.6 References
6. Colour measurement instruments
Abstract:
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Measuring instruments
6.3 Video cameras for colour measurement
6.4 Components of colour measuring instruments
6.5 Measuring geometry
6.6 Direct versus reverse optics
6.7 Sample preparation and presentation
6.8 Sources of error
6.9 Future trends
6.10 References
7. Using instruments to quantify colour
Abstract:
7.1 Colorimetry
7.2 Colour space
7.3 Reflectance of object
7.4 CIE tristimulus colour space
7.5 Chromaticity
7.6 Chromaticity diagram
7.7 Dominant wavelength and excitation purity
7.8 CIE object colour solid
7.9 Advantages and disadvantages of CIE tristimulus colorimetry
7.10 Uniform colour scales
7.11 Fundamental colour space
7.12 Future trends
7.13 References
8. Issues in measuring whiteness and fluorescence
Abstract:
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Characteristics of whites
8.3 Whiteness improvement
8.4 Fluorescence
8.5 Problems of assessment
8.6 Measurement of fluorescence
8.7 UV calibration
8.8 UV calibration standards
8.9 Visual assessment of whiteness
8.10 References
9. Instrumental measures of whiteness
Abstract:
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Physical methods
9.3 Colorimetric methods
9.4 New whiteness indices
9.5 Topology of whiteness
9.6 Yellowness index
9.7 Application of whiteness indices
9.8 References
Index

Report

"These volumes have earned their place on the well-equipped color science bookshelf, both for their up-to-dateness compared to the classics, and completeness of coverage across a wide range of topics." --AATCC Review

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.