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COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED   1




COLOR DIFFERENCE
INTRO
2


       The determination of the difference between
        the colours of two specimens is important in
        many applications, and especially so in those
        industries,

       such as textile dyeing, in which the colour of
        one specimen (the batch) is to be altered so
        that it imitates / duplicate that of the other (the
        standard).

                      COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
       This is usually an iterative process.
Reliability of visual colour-
3
    difference assessments
       the human visual system is excellent at
        assessing
       Whether two specimens match.




       If the supplier and customer assess its colour
        difference from standard visually, they are
        likely to disagree.
                     COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Reliability of visual colour-
4
    difference assessments
       quantifying both the repeatability and
        reproducibility of visual assessments of colour
        differences

        repeatability :is a measure of the extent to
        which a single assessor reports identical
        results,

       Reproducibility: is the corresponding
        measure for more than one assessor.
                    COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Reliability of instrumental colour-
5
    difference evaluation
       The results from instrumental methods are
        much less variable than those from visual
        assessments.




                    COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Development of CIELAB and
6
    CIELUV colour-difference formulae
       The result was the publication, in 1976,
       Of two CIE recommendations,
       CIELAB and CIELUV, for
       approximately uniform colour spaces and
        colour-difference calculations.




                    COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Calculation of CIELAB and CIELUV
7
         colour difference
    The colour difference between a
     batch (B)
    and its standard (S) is defined,
    in each space, as the Euclidean distance between the points (B
    and S) representing their colours in the relevant space.

    The formulae for the calculation
    of colour difference and its components in the two spaces are
    identical in all
    but the nomenclature of their variables. We shall therefore detail
    only those pertaining to the calculation of colour difference in
    CIELAB              COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Calculation of CIELAB colour
8
        difference
       If L*, a* and b* are the CIELAB rectangular
        coordinates of a batch,

       and L*S, a*S and b*S those of its standard,

       substituting ∆L* = L* – L*S,
                  ∆a* = a*B – a*S and
                  ∆b* = b*B – b*S
       in Eqn 4.22 gives Eqn 4.23:
                      COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
9




    COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Hue angle difference ∆h
10


        However, the hue
         angle difference ∆h
         is in degrees,
        and so is
         incommensurate
         with the other two
         variables:
        the substitution is
         mathematically
         invalid.

                     COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Hue angle difference ∆h
11


        The definition of CIELAB
         colour difference
         includes two methods of
         overcoming the problem.
        The first uses radian
         measure to obtain a
         close approximation to
         a hue
        (not hue angle)
        difference ∆H* in units
         commensurate with
         those of the other
         variables (Eqn 4.26):
                       COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
12


        Suppose there does exist a variable ∆H*ab
         representing, in units commensurate with
         the other variables of CIELAB colour
         difference, the hue difference between
         batch and standard,
        and that it is orthogonal to both ∆L* and
         ∆C*ab.

        Then ∆E*ab must be the
        Pythagorean COMPILED BY theseAHMED component
                     sum of TANVEER three
         differences
HUE Difference ∆H*ab (not hue
13
     angle)
        We know the value of each of the first three
         variables in
         Eqn 4.27------------- ∆E*ab
        from the output of Eqn 4.23, ----- ∆L* as one
         of the inputs to Eqn 4.23,
        and ∆C*ab ---------------------from Eqn
         4.24, each
        without knowledge of ∆H*ab.
        By rearranging Eqn 4.27 we can define ∆H*ab
         (Eqn 4.28):
                     COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Unfortunately, this method also has
14
     its problems.
        The other four components of CIELAB difference are defined
         as
        differences and are thus signed so that,
        for example,
        ∆L* > 0
        if L*B > L*S
         but ∆L* < 0
         if L*B < L*S,
        while ∆H*ab is defined (by Eqn 4.28)
        as a square root, the sign of which is indeterminate.




                         COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Unfortunately, this method also has
15
      its problems.
    The CIE states that ‘∆H*ab is
     to be regarded as positive
     if indicating an increase in hab
    and negative
    if indicating a decrease’.
     This may be interpreted as
     implying that the sign of ∆H*ab
     is that of ∆hab,
    So that ∆H*ab > 0
    if the batch is anticlockwise from
     its standard,
    and ∆H*ab < 0 if clockwise.


                           COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Unfortunately, this method also has
16
     its problems.
    Thus, for example,
    for batch B1a and
     standard S1
    where h,B1a = 30
    and for hab,S1 = 10,
    ∆hab = 30 – 10 = 20
     (greater than zero),
    so that the sign of
     ∆H*ab is positive.

                     COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
Unfortunately, this method also has
17
      its problems.
    Thus, for example,
    Now consider batch B1b
    where h,B1b = 350
    and for hab,S1 = 10,
    ∆hab = 350 – 10 = 340,
    which is again greater than zero so
     that ∆H*ab is positive.
    The hue vector from S1 to B1b
     must, however, clearly be
     considered clockwise, so that
    ∆hab and ∆H*ab should be
     negative.
    This problem arises
    whenever ∆hab > 180.
    The definition therefore presents
     problems, but for many years it
     offered the only way of calculating
     ∆Hab.                    COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
work of Huntsman.
18


        Another method was based on the work of
         Huntsman.
        Equating the right-hand sides of Eqns 4.23
         and 4.27, followed by manipulation, yields Eqn
         4.29




                      COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
work of Huntsman.
19

    Although Eqn 4.29 provides a
     simpler method of calculating
     ∆H*ab,
    it still suffers from the
     disadvantage that it outputs the
     wrong sign of ∆H*ab when ∆hab >
     180.
    The correct sign
     may, however, be determined
     without knowledge of the value
     of ∆hab,
    by testing the relative sizes of the
     two directed areas
    a*B       b*S and a*S b*B;
    denoting the correct sign of ∆H*
     by s [23] gives Eqn 4.30:
                            COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED   20




CMC(L:C)
COLOUR-DIFFERENCE
FORMULA
CMC(l : c)
21


        formula was published in 1984 under the
         name of CMC(l : c),
        CMC being the abbreviation commonly used
         for the Colour Measurement Committee (Eqn
         4.32) [24]:




                     COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
22

        where ∆L*, ∆C*ab and ∆H*ab
        are respectively the CIELAB lightness, chroma and
         hue
        differences between batch and standard,

         l and c are the tolerances applied respectively
        to differences in lightness and chroma relative to that
         to hue differences

        (the numerical values used in a given situation being
         substituted for the characters l and c,
        for example CMC(2 : 1), whenever there be possible
         ambiguity),
                        COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
23




                  where the ki
                   (i = 1, 2, 3) are as defined in Eqn
                  4.31, and L*S, C*ab,S and hab,S are
                  respectively the CIELAB lightness, chroma
                  and hue angle (in degrees) of the standard.


     COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
The mathematics of the CMC(l : c)
24
      formula deserve examination
    Because they well illustrate the general principles of
     optimised formulae, currently so important in industrial
     applications.

    In CIELAB space, Eqns 4.27 and 4.28 define the shell containing
     all shades equally acceptable as matches to (or perceived as
     equally different from) a standard at a given colour centre.

    Arising from the non-uniformity of CIELAB space, the magnitudes
     of each of ∆L*, ∆C*ab and ∆H*ab are not usually equal,
    and ∆E*ab is therefore a variable which is assumed in CMC(l : c)

    and most other optimised formulae to define an ellipsoidal shell
     with its three axes orientated in the directions of the component
     differences.
                          COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
The non-uniformity of CIELAB
25
     space further dictates
        The non-uniformity of CIELAB space further dictates that an
         equally acceptable (or perceptible) ∆E*ab, at another colour
         centre, is unlikely to define a similar shell.

        For a formula to allow SNSP, however, we require the overall
         colour difference to be a constant, so that its locus describes
         a spherical shell of equal radius at all colour centres.

        The ellipsoid in CIELAB space may be converted into a
         sphere by dividing each of its attribute differences (∆L*,
         ∆C*ab and ∆H*ab), in turn, by the length of the semi-axis of
         the ellipsoid in the direction of the relevant attribute difference
         (SL for lightness, SC for chroma and SH for hue).


                           COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
26


        The inclusion in Eqns 4.27 and 4.28 of the
         relative tolerances (l and c) yields the first line
         of the
        CMC(l : c) formula (Eqn 4.32).

        This line therefore converts a usually
         ellipsoidal tolerance volume in CIELAB space
         into a spherical one in a CMC(l : c)
         microspace.
                       COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
27

    The principal difficulty in the
     design of optimised colour-
     difference formulae,
    however, is to derive
     mathematics allowing the
     generation of the systematic
     variation
    in the relative magnitudes of
     attribute differences judged
     equally acceptable (or
     equally
    perceptible) at different
     centres. These mathematics
     occupy the whole of the
    remainder of the formula.
     Their effect is demonstrated
     in Figure 4.9.           COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
28




     COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED

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Color difference

  • 1. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED 1 COLOR DIFFERENCE
  • 2. INTRO 2  The determination of the difference between the colours of two specimens is important in many applications, and especially so in those industries,  such as textile dyeing, in which the colour of one specimen (the batch) is to be altered so that it imitates / duplicate that of the other (the standard). COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED  This is usually an iterative process.
  • 3. Reliability of visual colour- 3 difference assessments  the human visual system is excellent at assessing  Whether two specimens match.  If the supplier and customer assess its colour difference from standard visually, they are likely to disagree. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 4. Reliability of visual colour- 4 difference assessments  quantifying both the repeatability and reproducibility of visual assessments of colour differences  repeatability :is a measure of the extent to which a single assessor reports identical results,  Reproducibility: is the corresponding measure for more than one assessor. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 5. Reliability of instrumental colour- 5 difference evaluation  The results from instrumental methods are much less variable than those from visual assessments. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 6. Development of CIELAB and 6 CIELUV colour-difference formulae  The result was the publication, in 1976,  Of two CIE recommendations,  CIELAB and CIELUV, for  approximately uniform colour spaces and colour-difference calculations. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 7. Calculation of CIELAB and CIELUV 7 colour difference The colour difference between a batch (B) and its standard (S) is defined, in each space, as the Euclidean distance between the points (B and S) representing their colours in the relevant space. The formulae for the calculation of colour difference and its components in the two spaces are identical in all but the nomenclature of their variables. We shall therefore detail only those pertaining to the calculation of colour difference in CIELAB COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 8. Calculation of CIELAB colour 8 difference  If L*, a* and b* are the CIELAB rectangular coordinates of a batch,  and L*S, a*S and b*S those of its standard,  substituting ∆L* = L* – L*S,  ∆a* = a*B – a*S and  ∆b* = b*B – b*S  in Eqn 4.22 gives Eqn 4.23: COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 9. 9 COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 10. Hue angle difference ∆h 10  However, the hue angle difference ∆h is in degrees,  and so is incommensurate with the other two variables:  the substitution is mathematically invalid. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 11. Hue angle difference ∆h 11  The definition of CIELAB colour difference includes two methods of overcoming the problem.  The first uses radian measure to obtain a close approximation to a hue  (not hue angle)  difference ∆H* in units commensurate with those of the other variables (Eqn 4.26): COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 12. 12  Suppose there does exist a variable ∆H*ab representing, in units commensurate with the other variables of CIELAB colour difference, the hue difference between batch and standard,  and that it is orthogonal to both ∆L* and ∆C*ab.  Then ∆E*ab must be the  Pythagorean COMPILED BY theseAHMED component sum of TANVEER three differences
  • 13. HUE Difference ∆H*ab (not hue 13 angle)  We know the value of each of the first three variables in  Eqn 4.27------------- ∆E*ab  from the output of Eqn 4.23, ----- ∆L* as one of the inputs to Eqn 4.23,  and ∆C*ab ---------------------from Eqn 4.24, each  without knowledge of ∆H*ab.  By rearranging Eqn 4.27 we can define ∆H*ab (Eqn 4.28): COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 14. Unfortunately, this method also has 14 its problems.  The other four components of CIELAB difference are defined as  differences and are thus signed so that,  for example,  ∆L* > 0  if L*B > L*S  but ∆L* < 0  if L*B < L*S,  while ∆H*ab is defined (by Eqn 4.28)  as a square root, the sign of which is indeterminate. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 15. Unfortunately, this method also has 15 its problems.  The CIE states that ‘∆H*ab is to be regarded as positive  if indicating an increase in hab  and negative  if indicating a decrease’.  This may be interpreted as implying that the sign of ∆H*ab is that of ∆hab,  So that ∆H*ab > 0  if the batch is anticlockwise from its standard,  and ∆H*ab < 0 if clockwise. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 16. Unfortunately, this method also has 16 its problems.  Thus, for example,  for batch B1a and standard S1  where h,B1a = 30  and for hab,S1 = 10,  ∆hab = 30 – 10 = 20  (greater than zero),  so that the sign of ∆H*ab is positive. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 17. Unfortunately, this method also has 17 its problems.  Thus, for example,  Now consider batch B1b  where h,B1b = 350  and for hab,S1 = 10,  ∆hab = 350 – 10 = 340,  which is again greater than zero so that ∆H*ab is positive.  The hue vector from S1 to B1b must, however, clearly be considered clockwise, so that  ∆hab and ∆H*ab should be negative.  This problem arises  whenever ∆hab > 180.  The definition therefore presents problems, but for many years it offered the only way of calculating ∆Hab. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 18. work of Huntsman. 18  Another method was based on the work of Huntsman.  Equating the right-hand sides of Eqns 4.23 and 4.27, followed by manipulation, yields Eqn 4.29 COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 19. work of Huntsman. 19  Although Eqn 4.29 provides a simpler method of calculating ∆H*ab,  it still suffers from the disadvantage that it outputs the wrong sign of ∆H*ab when ∆hab > 180.  The correct sign may, however, be determined without knowledge of the value of ∆hab,  by testing the relative sizes of the two directed areas  a*B b*S and a*S b*B;  denoting the correct sign of ∆H* by s [23] gives Eqn 4.30: COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 20. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED 20 CMC(L:C) COLOUR-DIFFERENCE FORMULA
  • 21. CMC(l : c) 21  formula was published in 1984 under the name of CMC(l : c),  CMC being the abbreviation commonly used for the Colour Measurement Committee (Eqn 4.32) [24]: COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 22. 22  where ∆L*, ∆C*ab and ∆H*ab  are respectively the CIELAB lightness, chroma and hue  differences between batch and standard,  l and c are the tolerances applied respectively  to differences in lightness and chroma relative to that to hue differences  (the numerical values used in a given situation being substituted for the characters l and c,  for example CMC(2 : 1), whenever there be possible ambiguity), COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 23. 23 where the ki (i = 1, 2, 3) are as defined in Eqn 4.31, and L*S, C*ab,S and hab,S are respectively the CIELAB lightness, chroma and hue angle (in degrees) of the standard. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 24. The mathematics of the CMC(l : c) 24 formula deserve examination  Because they well illustrate the general principles of optimised formulae, currently so important in industrial applications.  In CIELAB space, Eqns 4.27 and 4.28 define the shell containing all shades equally acceptable as matches to (or perceived as equally different from) a standard at a given colour centre.  Arising from the non-uniformity of CIELAB space, the magnitudes of each of ∆L*, ∆C*ab and ∆H*ab are not usually equal,  and ∆E*ab is therefore a variable which is assumed in CMC(l : c)  and most other optimised formulae to define an ellipsoidal shell with its three axes orientated in the directions of the component differences. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 25. The non-uniformity of CIELAB 25 space further dictates  The non-uniformity of CIELAB space further dictates that an equally acceptable (or perceptible) ∆E*ab, at another colour centre, is unlikely to define a similar shell.  For a formula to allow SNSP, however, we require the overall colour difference to be a constant, so that its locus describes a spherical shell of equal radius at all colour centres.  The ellipsoid in CIELAB space may be converted into a sphere by dividing each of its attribute differences (∆L*, ∆C*ab and ∆H*ab), in turn, by the length of the semi-axis of the ellipsoid in the direction of the relevant attribute difference (SL for lightness, SC for chroma and SH for hue). COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 26. 26  The inclusion in Eqns 4.27 and 4.28 of the relative tolerances (l and c) yields the first line of the  CMC(l : c) formula (Eqn 4.32).  This line therefore converts a usually ellipsoidal tolerance volume in CIELAB space into a spherical one in a CMC(l : c) microspace. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 27. 27  The principal difficulty in the design of optimised colour- difference formulae,  however, is to derive mathematics allowing the generation of the systematic variation  in the relative magnitudes of attribute differences judged equally acceptable (or equally  perceptible) at different centres. These mathematics occupy the whole of the  remainder of the formula. Their effect is demonstrated in Figure 4.9. COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED
  • 28. 28 COMPILED BY TANVEER AHMED