Yahoo Groups archive

Digital BW, The Print

Index last updated: 2026-04-28 22:56 UTC

Message

RE: [Digital BW] Define "a neutral print"

2005-01-16 by Paul D. DeRocco

> From: koloshor [mailto:wiz@...]
>
> OK, I've got some concept of how we visually judge a print as
> warm, cool, or neutral. But is there a standard for neutral?
>
> If I take a decent colorimeter or spectrophotometer, will a
> neutral print have a=0, b=0 in LAB space, and just positive L
> values? Or is there more to it than that? Supposedly, the 6
> lowest squares of a Macbeth ColorChecker are all a=b=0, with L
> ranging from 20-96.

It would seem that neutral midtones would be a gray that doesn't change the
color of the light illuminating it, only attenuates it, which is to say
a=b=0. However, papers aren't necessarily neutral, either. So while a=b=0 is
probably a good scientific definition, in practice I'm not sure if prints
don't seem more neutral if the midtone color is chosen to match the paper.

--

Ciao,               Paul D. DeRocco
Paul                mailto:pderocco@...

Attachments

Move to quarantaine

This moves the raw source file on disk only. The archive index is not changed automatically, so you still need to run a manual refresh afterward.