beams of differently colored light combine.
(a)
W
R
Y
G
Cy
B
M
(b)
dull
C
light
W
gray
S
dark
Figure 1: (a) Color triangle. A point in the plane of the
triangle system represents the hue and saturation of a
color. Cy is cyan. (b) Tone triangle. A point in the plane of
the triangle system represents the lightness and saturation
of a color. C is the maximal color of each hue. S is black.
It has been found that mixing just three additive
primary colors (red, green, and blue) can produce
the majority of colors. In general, a color vector can
be described by a scalar and a direction. These
quantities are referred to as the tristimulus values, R
for the red component, G for the green component,
and B for the blue component, and are given as
follows:
BGRC
(1)
This is referred to as the RGB color model (Fig. 2)
and allows colors to be represented by a planar
diagram. The RGB color model can be used to
identify colors as the red, green, and blue
components (
R, G, B) corresponding to the three
axes of color space, as shown in Fig. 2. The
coordinates (
r, g, b) on the color triangle can specify
one of a range of colors. These coordinates
correspond to the relative amounts of
R, G, and B
that make up the color. For example, the coordinates
specifying the center of the color triangle represent
the case in which the three primary colors are mixed
in equal proportion and thus indicate the color white.
Such representations are referred to as chromaticity
diagrams. A chromaticity diagram represents hue
and saturation, but not lightness (Tilley, 1999). On
the color triangle (the dotted area in Fig. 2) (Valberg,
2005), the percentages of redness, greenness, and
blueness, where the total of the three attributes is
equivalent to 100%, specify a color. In order to
indicate only the direction of a color vector, i.e., the
chromaticity, the redness
r, greenness g, and
blueness
b are obtained as follows:
BGR
R
r
(2)
BGR
G
g
(3)
BGR
B
b
(4)
1
bgr
(5)
In other words, the direction is shown as the ratio of
the tristimulus values
R, G, and B. The total of these
ratios is equal to 1, as shown in Eq. (5).
In Fig. 2, at red
R, the components are (R, G, B)
= (1, 0, 0) and the coordinates are (
r, g, b) = (1, 0, 0).
At red, green, and blue, the components are (R, G,
B
) = (r, g, b); however, at yellow, for instance, the
components are (R, G, B) = (1, 1, 0) but the
coordinates are (
r, g, b) = (0.5, 0.5, 0). Colors on the
three squares WMRY, WYGCy, and WCyBM in
Fig. 3
a (color space) correspond to those on the
three diamonds WMRY, WYGCy, and WCyBM in
Fig. 1
a (color triangle). Thus, all of the colors on the
upper three squares in a color space can be displayed
in a color triangle.
2.2 Color Triangle and Tone Triangle
Designs
Next we consider the color triangle and the tone
triangle in RGB color space (Fig. 3). In the color
space, the color triangle is fixed, as shown in Fig.
3
a; for instance, when the hue of a color is red R, the
tone triangle is fixed, as shown in Fig. 3b.
In Fig. 1
a, Cy is cyan, midway between blue and
green (No. 6: cyan Cy in Fig. 4a). In Fig. 1b, C is the
maximal color (each hue at the maximum
chromaticness) (Sivik, 1997) (No. 66: red
R in Fig.
ICPRAM2014-InternationalConferenceonPatternRecognitionApplicationsandMethods
240