This second chapter of The Munsell Color System explains the quality of Color Value. Color Value is simply how light or dark a color is. Black is the lowest Color Value, white is the highest.Worry looks around, sorry looks back, faith looks up.
Home Hue Value Chroma Color Wheel Complementary Colors Balance Combinations Interactive Color Wheel
spc Bd 1 Bd 3
 
Share This Page

Color Value

The Munsell Color System

This is the second dimension of color and is possibly the simplest to understand. It is, according to Albert Munsell's definition, "The quality by which we distinguish a light color from a dark one." We noted that the first dimension did not tell us whether a color was light or dark. It told us that the color was green and not red, but we know that there may be light green and dark green. The function of Value is to tell us how light or how dark a given color is. For this purpose we shall need a scale of Value, which we may conceive as a vertical pole, or axis, to our circle of Hues. Black is at the lower end, representing total absence of light. White is at the top, representing pure light. Between these are a number of divisions of gray, regularly graded between black and white. This gradation could also be infinite. Since pure black is unattainable, we will call that 0 and begin our scale with the darkest gray as 1, numbering the steps up to 9, which is the lightest gray. Pure white, which is also unattainable, we will call 10. In the practical use of the scale of Value, therefore, we shall have but 9 steps and the middle one of these will be 5 - what is referred to as Middle Value. These steps of Value, have been scientifically measured and registered by means of an instrument called a Photometer.* In writing a color formula we express this dimension of Value by a numeral, which denotes at what step upon the scale of Value this color falls. This numeral is written above a line, as B 6/ for example, by which we mean that this particular blue, regardless of its other qualities, is as light or as dark as the 6th step upon the scale of Value. A color such as is commonly called "maroon" is an example of a red which is low in Value, because it is dark. What is called "pink" is a red which is high in Value because it is light. Now having familiarized ourselves with these two dimensions and understanding what qualities of a color they express, we may proceed to consider the third dimension. Without this third dimension our description of any given color is incomplete.

Color Value

FOOTNOTES:

*This instrument is described in Albert Munsell's book, "A Color Notation." Munsell Color Co., Boston, 1919, p. 38.

Continue on to Chapter 3 - Color Chroma

 

Forward Chap 1, Hue Chap 2, Value Chap 3, Chroma Chap 4, Color Wheel Chap 5, Complementaries Chap 6, Color Balance Chap 7, Color Combinations App 1 Summary and Usage App 2 Usage Examples App 3 Hue Nomenclature About This Book

Test your Skill

Test your skill with a computer mouse by clicking as many boxes as you can in 15 seconds.

Send To A Friend Link To The Site Map Send Us Your Suggestions Go To Related Links Link To Our Site
Send To A Friend Link To The Site Map Send Us Your Suggestions Go To Related Links Link To Our Site
Contact Us Tell Us About A Broken Link















The diamond cutter chooses which cut  will make the best use of the light, based on the shape of the diamond. See graphics of the different diamond cuts.


Munsell Color Wheel

B7
 
ApplePainter.com

Site Map | Terms of Use | Privacy & Security | Contact Us | Purchase Agreement | Send Feedback
Munsell Color Chart explained
© 1996-2005 by ApplePainter.com All Rights Reserved.