Peter87 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 26, 2024 9:08 pm
Ann wrote: ↑Sat Apr 20, 2024 7:53 pm
Peter87 wrote: ↑Sat Apr 20, 2024 5:01 pm
Ann, that’s very interesting to see the purple color with rgb values of r = 123, g = 0, and b = 222. The b = 222 is a high value -- approaching the maximum 255.
I am wondering how to describe the blue in the upper atmosphere behind the purple clouds in the first photo. It looks as if it is during blue hour. Do you think blue rgb values of blue hour would be lower than 222?
I'm not sure that the picture taken by Eiji Ogura was taken during the blue hour. It might have been. I think it is more likely that the other picture was. The clouds reflected the colors of the reddened Sun after it had sunk below the horizon.
Wikipedia shows us this cloudless picture of the blue hour:
My guess is that the b value of the sky during the blue hour would be 255.
I found an interesting chart showing the hues, hex codes and rgb values for several shades of purple. There is always more b than r in all these shades of purple, and the b value is at or close to 255 in all the shades of purple except the darkest ones.
Ann
Hi Ann, I hope you re having a good summer. I’ve been trying to understand the "Praia da Ursa, Cabo da Roca, Portugal during the blue hour” photograph in terms of the RGB model and this website
https://icolorpalette.com/color/twilight-blue.
Hex #0a437a with Rgb (10,67,122) seems similar to the Praia da Ursa photograph. It has a b value around the mid-point of 0 and 255. I would be interested in your perception of the blue of blue hour. Thanks, Peter
Well, there is a reason why the B value of the photograph in question is only halfway between 0 and 255, and that is that precisely that it was getting noticeably darker when that photo was taken. I didn't think of that, when I said that the B value of that picture would be close to 255.
To understand what I mean, take a look at the chart of the B values of shades of purple. Consider the values written in red lettering. For a long time the B value remains at 255, but when the hue is getting too dark, the B value drops.
I would guess that it was exactly that fact that made the B value drop way below 255 in the photo we are discussing. By the way, let's take a look at the shade of blue that a hex value of #0a437a produces and compare it with the appearance of the photo. This is the hue I got when I used your Hex value:
███
As you can see, that's a very dark shade of blue. That is why the B value has dropped well below 255. The sky in the photo of Praia da Ursa, Cabo da Roca, Portugal during the blue hour, is not that dark at all.
I wasn't able to find a very good match for the sky color in the picture, but maybe this will do:
███
The hex value of that shade of blue is #64C4FF. I don't know what its RGB values are, but I would definitely say that it has a B value of 255. All right, I googled it, and the RGB values for #64C4FF are R = 100, G = 196 and B = 255. Only saturated hues display the values 0,0,255 (or 255,0,0 or 0,255,0), and this shade of blue is not saturated.
I actually wasn't able to find a hue whose RGB value is 0,0,255. The closest I got was these two:
███ (0, 11, 255) and
███ (10, 0, 255)
The most saturated green hue I could find was this one (and this is actually all green!):
███ (0, 255, 0)
A saturated shade of red is easy:
███ (255, 0, 0)
Hope that helped.
Ann