Where to Find the Colors Your Screen Can't Show You
7 hours ago
- #sRGB gamut
- #color perception
- #real-world colors
- Colors exist in the real world that cannot be displayed on digital screens or captured by digital photography, such as vivid cyans.
- Human color perception relies on three cone cells that respond to light wavelengths; any two spectra producing identical cone responses appear the same color.
- CIE's 1931 chromaticity diagram maps human-visible colors, but chosen primary wavelengths cannot produce all colors, especially cyans, due to the need for 'negative red.'
- Color TV and sRGB standards use phosphors instead of pure wavelengths, limiting displayed colors to a small gamut; modern smartphone screens (Display-P3) offer slightly wider range.
- LED lighting also poorly reproduces cyans, as white LEDs combine blue LEDs with yellow phosphors, leaving a gap at cyan wavelengths.
- Natural processes like light filtering through leaves in forests or water absorption create highly saturated greens and cyans outside the sRGB gamut.
- Bird color vision is more advanced than mammalian vision, with a broader gamut and UV perception, driving vibrant plumage often using structural colors (e.g., iridescence via melanin layers).
- Butterflies, like birdwing butterflies and Morpho species, exhibit intense, iridescent colors outside display gamuts due to structural scales.
- Bioluminescence and fluorescence in deep-sea organisms, glow worms, and scorpions produce cyans not reproducible on screens.
- Traffic light 'green' signals are actually a vivid turquoise outside typical display gamuts, optimized for colorblind distinction.
- Lasers produce the purest spectral colors, with green lasers representing a uniquely artificial color due to geometric constraints in natural spectra.
- Perception of these colors requires attention; once noticed, they become striking, revealing the limitations of digital representations.