Bright yellow or light yellow?Why 'pale' yellow instead of 'light' yellow and what are the other colors used with 'pale'?Fall vs Fall downAre the dictionary terms synonyms?“arrive” Vs. “reach” what are the differences if any?
Was there a shared-world project before "Thieves World"?
Was there a Viking Exchange as well as a Columbian one?
How to not starve gigantic beasts
How exactly does Hawking radiation decrease the mass of black holes?
Could the terminal length of components like resistors be reduced?
555 timer FM transmitter
Pulling the rope with one hand is as heavy as with two hands?
How can Republicans who favour free markets, consistently express anger when they don't like the outcome of that choice?
Can we say “you can pay when the order gets ready”?
Is there really no use for MD5 anymore?
Checks user level and limit the data before saving it to mongoDB
Multiple options vs single option UI
How did Captain America manage to do this?
How do I check if a string is entirely made of the same substring?
I preordered a game on my Xbox while on the home screen of my friend's account. Which of us owns the game?
Minor Revision with suggestion of an alternative proof by reviewer
If a planet has 3 moons, is it possible to have triple Full/New Moons at once?
Extension of 2-adic valuation to the real numbers
Does tea made with boiling water cool faster than tea made with boiled (but still hot) water?
What happens to Mjolnir (Thor's hammer) at the end of Endgame?
Mistake in years of experience in resume?
Why was the Spitfire's elliptical wing almost uncopied by other aircraft of World War 2?
Does Gita support doctrine of eternal samsara?
Is the claim "Employers won't employ people with no 'social media presence'" realistic?
Bright yellow or light yellow?
Why 'pale' yellow instead of 'light' yellow and what are the other colors used with 'pale'?Fall vs Fall downAre the dictionary terms synonyms?“arrive” Vs. “reach” what are the differences if any?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
What's the correct term about the colour of lemon juice. Is it bright or light? I am confused between these two terms. When we see any color we can classify it into two main groups: dark or bright /light. Based on Cambridge dictionary the meaning of bright is strong in colour. Does it mean that we can use dark and bright color as synonyms?
word-difference
add a comment |
What's the correct term about the colour of lemon juice. Is it bright or light? I am confused between these two terms. When we see any color we can classify it into two main groups: dark or bright /light. Based on Cambridge dictionary the meaning of bright is strong in colour. Does it mean that we can use dark and bright color as synonyms?
word-difference
Related question: Why 'pale' yellow instead of 'light' yellow and what are the other colors used with 'pale'?
– ColleenV♦
2 days ago
add a comment |
What's the correct term about the colour of lemon juice. Is it bright or light? I am confused between these two terms. When we see any color we can classify it into two main groups: dark or bright /light. Based on Cambridge dictionary the meaning of bright is strong in colour. Does it mean that we can use dark and bright color as synonyms?
word-difference
What's the correct term about the colour of lemon juice. Is it bright or light? I am confused between these two terms. When we see any color we can classify it into two main groups: dark or bright /light. Based on Cambridge dictionary the meaning of bright is strong in colour. Does it mean that we can use dark and bright color as synonyms?
word-difference
word-difference
asked Apr 23 at 20:43
Scarcely PonderScarcely Ponder
12.2k75206369
12.2k75206369
Related question: Why 'pale' yellow instead of 'light' yellow and what are the other colors used with 'pale'?
– ColleenV♦
2 days ago
add a comment |
Related question: Why 'pale' yellow instead of 'light' yellow and what are the other colors used with 'pale'?
– ColleenV♦
2 days ago
Related question: Why 'pale' yellow instead of 'light' yellow and what are the other colors used with 'pale'?
– ColleenV♦
2 days ago
Related question: Why 'pale' yellow instead of 'light' yellow and what are the other colors used with 'pale'?
– ColleenV♦
2 days ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
There is some overlap and some contrast in the meanings. It matters whether you are talking about paint or light.
If you take a pure yellow colour, such as the yellow colour in the rainbow, or the yellow of the skin of a lemon, this is a bright yellow. Painters use "cadmium yellow paint" for this.
If you take some cadmium yellow paint and mix some white the colour becomes paler, more like the colour of cream. This is a light yellow.
If you take the same yellow paint and add a little black you will get a dark yellow (which quickly becomes brown as you add more black, so "dark yellow" is not actually used very often)
If you have a yellow lamp, there is an ambiguity in the meaning of "bright" as it could refer to the purity of the yellow, or the power of the lamp. A powerful lamp is bright and a weak one is dim. This meaning of "bright" is different from the meaning applied to paint.
Examples:
Van Gogh used bright yellow paint for his sunflowers paintings.
I used a pale yellow to paint the walls of my bedroom, because the bright yellow was overpowering.
If your urine is a dark yellow, you may be suffering from dehydration. Drink plenty of water!
Contrast - I see what you did there ;) "Contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view." Therefore this question is unanswerable because there is neither a picture of lemon juice, nor of anything to contrast it against. Also, I believe the OP is actually talking about luminance, which is rated in candela.
– Mazura
Apr 24 at 1:57
add a comment |
Light means a color that tends toward white. Dark means a color that tends toward black. Bright means intense in color but not a dark color.
As applied to yellow, in the squares below, the middle center one is bright yellow, the bottom center one is light yellow, and the top left one is dark yellow. Judgment can vary about how to name shades in between.
4
In other words: ‘bright’ refers to saturation as well as to luminance.
– gidds
2 days ago
add a comment |
The difference between lightness and brightness, with respect to color, is a difference in color space used to describe the object. Subjectively some people interchange the usage, and of course conversion from one color space to another is usually possible; that's not always lossless.
HSL (hue, saturation and lightness) is often called the "bi-hexcone model" while HSV (hue, saturation and brightness or value) is often called the "hexcone model".
Wikipedia's webpage HSL and HSB/HSV explains:
The HSB/HSV representation models the way paints of different colors mix together, with the saturation dimension resembling various shades of brightly colored paint, and the value dimension resembling the mixture of those paints with varying amounts of black or white paint.
The HSL model attempts to resemble more perceptual color models such as the Natural Color System (NCS) or Munsell color system, placing fully saturated colors around a circle at a lightness value of 1⁄2, where a lightness value of 0 or 1 is fully black or white, respectively.
...
Brightness and colorfulness are absolute measures, which usually describe the spectral distribution of light entering the eye, while lightness and chroma are measured relative to some white point, and are thus often used for descriptions of surface colors, remaining roughly constant even as brightness and colorfulness change with different illumination. Saturation can be defined as either the ratio of colorfulness to brightness or that of chroma to lightness.
A simplified and not completely accurate description is to say that lighter objects are whiter while brighter objects are more colorful. In the HSL colorspace an object that is 50% light is equal to an object in the HSB colorspace that is 100% bright. The inaccuracy in such an exact conversion comes from the brain's perception of color.
Referring to lemonade as bright or light yellow is unlikely to spark an argument. Lightness is the perceived reflectance of white. Brightness is how much of the color (not black, grey, or white) is reflected towards your eye (the color intensity, not the white intensity).
Perhaps the easiest way to remember the difference is: Lightness is perceived illumination (assuming white light) while brightness is the luminance, the amount of color (how far from black, with equal amounts of color, furthest away, being white).
add a comment |
protected by Community♦ 2 days ago
Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).
Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
There is some overlap and some contrast in the meanings. It matters whether you are talking about paint or light.
If you take a pure yellow colour, such as the yellow colour in the rainbow, or the yellow of the skin of a lemon, this is a bright yellow. Painters use "cadmium yellow paint" for this.
If you take some cadmium yellow paint and mix some white the colour becomes paler, more like the colour of cream. This is a light yellow.
If you take the same yellow paint and add a little black you will get a dark yellow (which quickly becomes brown as you add more black, so "dark yellow" is not actually used very often)
If you have a yellow lamp, there is an ambiguity in the meaning of "bright" as it could refer to the purity of the yellow, or the power of the lamp. A powerful lamp is bright and a weak one is dim. This meaning of "bright" is different from the meaning applied to paint.
Examples:
Van Gogh used bright yellow paint for his sunflowers paintings.
I used a pale yellow to paint the walls of my bedroom, because the bright yellow was overpowering.
If your urine is a dark yellow, you may be suffering from dehydration. Drink plenty of water!
Contrast - I see what you did there ;) "Contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view." Therefore this question is unanswerable because there is neither a picture of lemon juice, nor of anything to contrast it against. Also, I believe the OP is actually talking about luminance, which is rated in candela.
– Mazura
Apr 24 at 1:57
add a comment |
There is some overlap and some contrast in the meanings. It matters whether you are talking about paint or light.
If you take a pure yellow colour, such as the yellow colour in the rainbow, or the yellow of the skin of a lemon, this is a bright yellow. Painters use "cadmium yellow paint" for this.
If you take some cadmium yellow paint and mix some white the colour becomes paler, more like the colour of cream. This is a light yellow.
If you take the same yellow paint and add a little black you will get a dark yellow (which quickly becomes brown as you add more black, so "dark yellow" is not actually used very often)
If you have a yellow lamp, there is an ambiguity in the meaning of "bright" as it could refer to the purity of the yellow, or the power of the lamp. A powerful lamp is bright and a weak one is dim. This meaning of "bright" is different from the meaning applied to paint.
Examples:
Van Gogh used bright yellow paint for his sunflowers paintings.
I used a pale yellow to paint the walls of my bedroom, because the bright yellow was overpowering.
If your urine is a dark yellow, you may be suffering from dehydration. Drink plenty of water!
Contrast - I see what you did there ;) "Contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view." Therefore this question is unanswerable because there is neither a picture of lemon juice, nor of anything to contrast it against. Also, I believe the OP is actually talking about luminance, which is rated in candela.
– Mazura
Apr 24 at 1:57
add a comment |
There is some overlap and some contrast in the meanings. It matters whether you are talking about paint or light.
If you take a pure yellow colour, such as the yellow colour in the rainbow, or the yellow of the skin of a lemon, this is a bright yellow. Painters use "cadmium yellow paint" for this.
If you take some cadmium yellow paint and mix some white the colour becomes paler, more like the colour of cream. This is a light yellow.
If you take the same yellow paint and add a little black you will get a dark yellow (which quickly becomes brown as you add more black, so "dark yellow" is not actually used very often)
If you have a yellow lamp, there is an ambiguity in the meaning of "bright" as it could refer to the purity of the yellow, or the power of the lamp. A powerful lamp is bright and a weak one is dim. This meaning of "bright" is different from the meaning applied to paint.
Examples:
Van Gogh used bright yellow paint for his sunflowers paintings.
I used a pale yellow to paint the walls of my bedroom, because the bright yellow was overpowering.
If your urine is a dark yellow, you may be suffering from dehydration. Drink plenty of water!
There is some overlap and some contrast in the meanings. It matters whether you are talking about paint or light.
If you take a pure yellow colour, such as the yellow colour in the rainbow, or the yellow of the skin of a lemon, this is a bright yellow. Painters use "cadmium yellow paint" for this.
If you take some cadmium yellow paint and mix some white the colour becomes paler, more like the colour of cream. This is a light yellow.
If you take the same yellow paint and add a little black you will get a dark yellow (which quickly becomes brown as you add more black, so "dark yellow" is not actually used very often)
If you have a yellow lamp, there is an ambiguity in the meaning of "bright" as it could refer to the purity of the yellow, or the power of the lamp. A powerful lamp is bright and a weak one is dim. This meaning of "bright" is different from the meaning applied to paint.
Examples:
Van Gogh used bright yellow paint for his sunflowers paintings.
I used a pale yellow to paint the walls of my bedroom, because the bright yellow was overpowering.
If your urine is a dark yellow, you may be suffering from dehydration. Drink plenty of water!
answered Apr 23 at 21:23
James KJames K
42.7k145107
42.7k145107
Contrast - I see what you did there ;) "Contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view." Therefore this question is unanswerable because there is neither a picture of lemon juice, nor of anything to contrast it against. Also, I believe the OP is actually talking about luminance, which is rated in candela.
– Mazura
Apr 24 at 1:57
add a comment |
Contrast - I see what you did there ;) "Contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view." Therefore this question is unanswerable because there is neither a picture of lemon juice, nor of anything to contrast it against. Also, I believe the OP is actually talking about luminance, which is rated in candela.
– Mazura
Apr 24 at 1:57
Contrast - I see what you did there ;) "Contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view." Therefore this question is unanswerable because there is neither a picture of lemon juice, nor of anything to contrast it against. Also, I believe the OP is actually talking about luminance, which is rated in candela.
– Mazura
Apr 24 at 1:57
Contrast - I see what you did there ;) "Contrast is determined by the difference in the color and brightness of the object and other objects within the same field of view." Therefore this question is unanswerable because there is neither a picture of lemon juice, nor of anything to contrast it against. Also, I believe the OP is actually talking about luminance, which is rated in candela.
– Mazura
Apr 24 at 1:57
add a comment |
Light means a color that tends toward white. Dark means a color that tends toward black. Bright means intense in color but not a dark color.
As applied to yellow, in the squares below, the middle center one is bright yellow, the bottom center one is light yellow, and the top left one is dark yellow. Judgment can vary about how to name shades in between.
4
In other words: ‘bright’ refers to saturation as well as to luminance.
– gidds
2 days ago
add a comment |
Light means a color that tends toward white. Dark means a color that tends toward black. Bright means intense in color but not a dark color.
As applied to yellow, in the squares below, the middle center one is bright yellow, the bottom center one is light yellow, and the top left one is dark yellow. Judgment can vary about how to name shades in between.
4
In other words: ‘bright’ refers to saturation as well as to luminance.
– gidds
2 days ago
add a comment |
Light means a color that tends toward white. Dark means a color that tends toward black. Bright means intense in color but not a dark color.
As applied to yellow, in the squares below, the middle center one is bright yellow, the bottom center one is light yellow, and the top left one is dark yellow. Judgment can vary about how to name shades in between.
Light means a color that tends toward white. Dark means a color that tends toward black. Bright means intense in color but not a dark color.
As applied to yellow, in the squares below, the middle center one is bright yellow, the bottom center one is light yellow, and the top left one is dark yellow. Judgment can vary about how to name shades in between.
edited Apr 23 at 21:31
answered Apr 23 at 21:24
Paul DexterPaul Dexter
1,847813
1,847813
4
In other words: ‘bright’ refers to saturation as well as to luminance.
– gidds
2 days ago
add a comment |
4
In other words: ‘bright’ refers to saturation as well as to luminance.
– gidds
2 days ago
4
4
In other words: ‘bright’ refers to saturation as well as to luminance.
– gidds
2 days ago
In other words: ‘bright’ refers to saturation as well as to luminance.
– gidds
2 days ago
add a comment |
The difference between lightness and brightness, with respect to color, is a difference in color space used to describe the object. Subjectively some people interchange the usage, and of course conversion from one color space to another is usually possible; that's not always lossless.
HSL (hue, saturation and lightness) is often called the "bi-hexcone model" while HSV (hue, saturation and brightness or value) is often called the "hexcone model".
Wikipedia's webpage HSL and HSB/HSV explains:
The HSB/HSV representation models the way paints of different colors mix together, with the saturation dimension resembling various shades of brightly colored paint, and the value dimension resembling the mixture of those paints with varying amounts of black or white paint.
The HSL model attempts to resemble more perceptual color models such as the Natural Color System (NCS) or Munsell color system, placing fully saturated colors around a circle at a lightness value of 1⁄2, where a lightness value of 0 or 1 is fully black or white, respectively.
...
Brightness and colorfulness are absolute measures, which usually describe the spectral distribution of light entering the eye, while lightness and chroma are measured relative to some white point, and are thus often used for descriptions of surface colors, remaining roughly constant even as brightness and colorfulness change with different illumination. Saturation can be defined as either the ratio of colorfulness to brightness or that of chroma to lightness.
A simplified and not completely accurate description is to say that lighter objects are whiter while brighter objects are more colorful. In the HSL colorspace an object that is 50% light is equal to an object in the HSB colorspace that is 100% bright. The inaccuracy in such an exact conversion comes from the brain's perception of color.
Referring to lemonade as bright or light yellow is unlikely to spark an argument. Lightness is the perceived reflectance of white. Brightness is how much of the color (not black, grey, or white) is reflected towards your eye (the color intensity, not the white intensity).
Perhaps the easiest way to remember the difference is: Lightness is perceived illumination (assuming white light) while brightness is the luminance, the amount of color (how far from black, with equal amounts of color, furthest away, being white).
add a comment |
The difference between lightness and brightness, with respect to color, is a difference in color space used to describe the object. Subjectively some people interchange the usage, and of course conversion from one color space to another is usually possible; that's not always lossless.
HSL (hue, saturation and lightness) is often called the "bi-hexcone model" while HSV (hue, saturation and brightness or value) is often called the "hexcone model".
Wikipedia's webpage HSL and HSB/HSV explains:
The HSB/HSV representation models the way paints of different colors mix together, with the saturation dimension resembling various shades of brightly colored paint, and the value dimension resembling the mixture of those paints with varying amounts of black or white paint.
The HSL model attempts to resemble more perceptual color models such as the Natural Color System (NCS) or Munsell color system, placing fully saturated colors around a circle at a lightness value of 1⁄2, where a lightness value of 0 or 1 is fully black or white, respectively.
...
Brightness and colorfulness are absolute measures, which usually describe the spectral distribution of light entering the eye, while lightness and chroma are measured relative to some white point, and are thus often used for descriptions of surface colors, remaining roughly constant even as brightness and colorfulness change with different illumination. Saturation can be defined as either the ratio of colorfulness to brightness or that of chroma to lightness.
A simplified and not completely accurate description is to say that lighter objects are whiter while brighter objects are more colorful. In the HSL colorspace an object that is 50% light is equal to an object in the HSB colorspace that is 100% bright. The inaccuracy in such an exact conversion comes from the brain's perception of color.
Referring to lemonade as bright or light yellow is unlikely to spark an argument. Lightness is the perceived reflectance of white. Brightness is how much of the color (not black, grey, or white) is reflected towards your eye (the color intensity, not the white intensity).
Perhaps the easiest way to remember the difference is: Lightness is perceived illumination (assuming white light) while brightness is the luminance, the amount of color (how far from black, with equal amounts of color, furthest away, being white).
add a comment |
The difference between lightness and brightness, with respect to color, is a difference in color space used to describe the object. Subjectively some people interchange the usage, and of course conversion from one color space to another is usually possible; that's not always lossless.
HSL (hue, saturation and lightness) is often called the "bi-hexcone model" while HSV (hue, saturation and brightness or value) is often called the "hexcone model".
Wikipedia's webpage HSL and HSB/HSV explains:
The HSB/HSV representation models the way paints of different colors mix together, with the saturation dimension resembling various shades of brightly colored paint, and the value dimension resembling the mixture of those paints with varying amounts of black or white paint.
The HSL model attempts to resemble more perceptual color models such as the Natural Color System (NCS) or Munsell color system, placing fully saturated colors around a circle at a lightness value of 1⁄2, where a lightness value of 0 or 1 is fully black or white, respectively.
...
Brightness and colorfulness are absolute measures, which usually describe the spectral distribution of light entering the eye, while lightness and chroma are measured relative to some white point, and are thus often used for descriptions of surface colors, remaining roughly constant even as brightness and colorfulness change with different illumination. Saturation can be defined as either the ratio of colorfulness to brightness or that of chroma to lightness.
A simplified and not completely accurate description is to say that lighter objects are whiter while brighter objects are more colorful. In the HSL colorspace an object that is 50% light is equal to an object in the HSB colorspace that is 100% bright. The inaccuracy in such an exact conversion comes from the brain's perception of color.
Referring to lemonade as bright or light yellow is unlikely to spark an argument. Lightness is the perceived reflectance of white. Brightness is how much of the color (not black, grey, or white) is reflected towards your eye (the color intensity, not the white intensity).
Perhaps the easiest way to remember the difference is: Lightness is perceived illumination (assuming white light) while brightness is the luminance, the amount of color (how far from black, with equal amounts of color, furthest away, being white).
The difference between lightness and brightness, with respect to color, is a difference in color space used to describe the object. Subjectively some people interchange the usage, and of course conversion from one color space to another is usually possible; that's not always lossless.
HSL (hue, saturation and lightness) is often called the "bi-hexcone model" while HSV (hue, saturation and brightness or value) is often called the "hexcone model".
Wikipedia's webpage HSL and HSB/HSV explains:
The HSB/HSV representation models the way paints of different colors mix together, with the saturation dimension resembling various shades of brightly colored paint, and the value dimension resembling the mixture of those paints with varying amounts of black or white paint.
The HSL model attempts to resemble more perceptual color models such as the Natural Color System (NCS) or Munsell color system, placing fully saturated colors around a circle at a lightness value of 1⁄2, where a lightness value of 0 or 1 is fully black or white, respectively.
...
Brightness and colorfulness are absolute measures, which usually describe the spectral distribution of light entering the eye, while lightness and chroma are measured relative to some white point, and are thus often used for descriptions of surface colors, remaining roughly constant even as brightness and colorfulness change with different illumination. Saturation can be defined as either the ratio of colorfulness to brightness or that of chroma to lightness.
A simplified and not completely accurate description is to say that lighter objects are whiter while brighter objects are more colorful. In the HSL colorspace an object that is 50% light is equal to an object in the HSB colorspace that is 100% bright. The inaccuracy in such an exact conversion comes from the brain's perception of color.
Referring to lemonade as bright or light yellow is unlikely to spark an argument. Lightness is the perceived reflectance of white. Brightness is how much of the color (not black, grey, or white) is reflected towards your eye (the color intensity, not the white intensity).
Perhaps the easiest way to remember the difference is: Lightness is perceived illumination (assuming white light) while brightness is the luminance, the amount of color (how far from black, with equal amounts of color, furthest away, being white).
answered 2 days ago
RobRob
464210
464210
add a comment |
add a comment |
protected by Community♦ 2 days ago
Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).
Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?
Related question: Why 'pale' yellow instead of 'light' yellow and what are the other colors used with 'pale'?
– ColleenV♦
2 days ago