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"What Is CIELAB Color Space?"

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"Spectrophotometers are Essential for Creating Colorful Luggage"

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"Human Factors That Affect How We See Colors"

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"Gloss Measurement: SPIN vs. SPEX"

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"What to Know About Cocoa Powder Color Measurement"

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"What Is Photometric Range and Photometry?"

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"Spectrophotometers Provide Quality Control Assurance for Powdered Drink Manufacturers"

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What Is CIELAB Color Space?

Posted on Jan 14, 2026 by HunterLab

The human eye can perceive millions of colors, but it does not always distinguish them accurately. Two slightly different colors may appear the same, or identical colors may look different depending on viewing angle and lighting. This creates challenges when communicating about color. For designers and manufacturers, the inability to precisely identify and communicate color complicates efforts to replicate standards and detect discrepancies.

To reproduce an exact color consistently, manufacturers and designers rely on ways to quantify a color's properties and calculate the numerical difference between colors. CIELAB, or CIE L*a*b*, is a device-independent, three-dimensional color space that measures and compares all perceptible colors using three values. In this space, numerical differences correspond to the degree of change humans can perceive.

CIELAB is based on opponent color theory showing that the brain interprets retinal inputs as differences between light and dark (lightness) and between opposing pairs of colors: red/green and blue/yellow. This is known as the principle of color opposition correlation, as a color cannot be both red and green, or yellow and blue, simultaneously. For example, you will never see a "greenish red.

What Is the CIELAB Color Model?

The L, a, b color space was first defined in 1942 by Richard S. Hunter, founder of HunterLab. Hunter’s system used coordinates labeled L, a, and b, calculated from the CIE 1931 XYZ color space, and was intended to be more perceptually uniform. In 1976, the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) created the CIELAB model as a refinement of Hunter’s work. To distinguish between the two systems, CIELAB uses L*, a*, b* notation. The “CIE” refers to the French name of the organization: Commission Internationale de l'Éclairage.

Both Hunter L, a, b and CIELAB (L*, a*, b*) are grounded in Opponent-Color Theory, which assumes that the human eye perceives colors in opposing pairs:

  • L scale: Light vs. dark, with low numbers (0–50) indicating dark and high numbers (51–100) indicating light.
  • a scale: Red vs. green, with positive values indicating red and negative values indicating green.
  • b scale: Yellow vs. blue, with positive values indicating yellow and negative values indicating blue.

An ideal color scale would be uniform, meaning that a one-unit difference would appear visually equal regardless of hue. In practice, neither Hunter L, a, b nor CIELAB is perfectly uniform. Hunter’s scale applies a square root function to Y/Yn for calculating lightness (L), which tends to compress values in the yellow region and expand them in the blue region. CIELAB, by contrast, applies a cube root function to X/Xn, Y/Yn, and Z/Zn, with a linear extension near black. While this improves uniformity overall, CIELAB tends to over-expand the yellow region of color space. Both scales are effective for measurement and for setting tolerance standards. However, CIELAB generally provides a closer match to visual perception. With practice, either system supports intuitive understanding and communication of color values.

Posted in Color And Appearance Theory

Spectrophotometers are Essential for Creating Colorful Luggage

Posted on Dec 19, 2025 by HunterLab

Brightly-colored pieces of luggage are often easier to identify in busy airports, making these desirable products for frequent travelers. Image Source: Shutterstock user Nick Starichenko

A traveler has finally reached his destination after a long international flight. He’s eager to get to his hotel and relax, but first, he has to wait for his luggage to arrive at baggage claim. The traveler watches hundreds of plain black suitcases circle the baggage claim turnstyle—each one looks almost identical, and his fellow travelers have a difficult time identifying their own luggage in the sea of black and grey. That’s when the traveler spots his suitcase; it’s a vibrant shade of hot pink that’s nearly impossible to miss. He’s able to quickly claim it and continue with his day.

An estimated 21.6 million bags were lost at airports worldwide in 2016—that’s nearly six bags per every 1,000 airline passengers. And in about 4 percent of these cases, passengers never picked up their luggage from baggage claim.1 In many cases, this is due to misidentification; either a passenger picks up someone else’s luggage by mistake, or a passenger isn’t able to locate the luggage on the carousel.

In both cases, having a distinctively colored suitcase may have prevented the mix-ups from happening. This is part of the reason luggage manufacturers are increasingly choosing to create bags that feature unusual colors, making it easier for their customers to identify their suitcases in a crowd. But having more colorful design options also necessitates better color quality control protocols. Color measurement instruments like spectrophotometers can help you create colorful luggage that stands out from other bags on the market.

Reframing of luggage as fashion accessories have led to a proliferation of vibrant colors. Image Source: Shutterstock user Thitirat J13

Posted in Color In Plastics

Human Factors That Affect How We See Colors

Posted on Dec 19, 2025 by HunterLab

Many factors impact an individual’s color perception, so not all humans see color the same way. Read more about how humans see color and what can affect the ways that we perceive color.

How Humans See Color

When light hits an object, the item absorbs some light and reflects the rest. This reflected light penetrates the human eye and the lens focuses it into the retina. The retina has cones and rods that process the light into nerve impulses. This transmits a signal to the brain, resulting in seeing a color. Color is powerful, even influencing how we see certain businesses because of their branding styles.

Objects do not have an inherent color — we perceive the reflected color that the object’s surface does not absorb. A red delicious apple isn’t really red because the apple reflects the wavelengths we perceive as red and absorbs the rest. When all the wavelengths are reflected, the object appears white. When the object’s surface absorbs all the wavelengths, the object appears black.

Posted in Color And Appearance Theory

Gloss Measurement: SPIN vs. SPEX

Posted on Dec 19, 2025 by HunterLab

When analyzing a surface, keep in mind that texture influences how color is perceived. High gloss surfaces obscure color, and changing this texture to something more matte can change how the color looks. Since color measurement with a spectrophotometer involves shining light onto the surface and measuring reflectance, special considerations must be made about evaluating color and appearance (SPEX) or color alone (SPIN) with gloss.

Understanding Gloss Measurements

Gloss is a surface attribute that creates a shiny, metallic appearance. This visual perception appears when the surface is elevated and exposed to direct light. Gloss measurements are taken with a glossmeter that determines specular reflection (gloss) by measuring the amount of reflected light at an equal and opposite angle.
Knowing how to measure the color of a gloss depends on the surface type. For coatings, plastics and other nonmetal surfaces, some of the light is absorbed into the material. Metal surfaces are more reflective, so the angle doesn’t need to be so specific.

The settings to use when measuring the color of a gloss depend on the surface type. The standard measuring angles are:

  • High gloss surfaces: 20°
  • Mid gloss surfaces: 60°
  • Low gloss surfaces: 85°
  • International standard: 60°

It is important to know gloss measurements because gloss psychologically influences customers, so this aspect needs to be consistent across products and batches.

Posted in Applications

What to Know About Cocoa Powder Color Measurement

Posted on Dec 19, 2025 by HunterLab

For more than 70 years, HunterLab has pioneered solutions for the food industry. Color measurement is key to creating a consistent brand identity through your products and maintaining consumer trust in your processes. Foods like cocoa powder are in nearly every home cupboard, so delivering a superior solution with the expected appearance is the best way to beat the competition. Learn more about cocoa powder color measurement today.

Posted in Color Measurement

What Is Photometric Range and Photometry?

Posted on Dec 18, 2025 by HunterLab

Spectrophotometers use photometric range data to provide you with valuable insights into your products and help you ensure maximum quality assurance through color. At HunterLab, we understand color means everything and is essential to maintaining your brand integrity. 

Photometric range refers to the range of light waves from ultraviolet to infrared wavelengths. The photometric range spans both the visible spectrum of color and wavelengths invisible to the naked eye. Measuring the photometric range requires converting light into an electrical current by using photodiodes, photoresistors or photomultipliers. Through measuring photometric range, you can calculate:

  • Fluorescence.
  • Irradiance.
  • Light absorption.
  • Luminance.
  • Phosphorescence.
  • Reflection of light.
  • Scattering of light.

Posted in Color Measurement

Spectrophotometers Provide Quality Control Assurance for Powdered Drink Manufacturers

Posted on Dec 18, 2025 by HunterLab

“He’s not the Kool-Aid man!” screams Billy. “The Kool-Aid man is cherry red! He’s not cherry red!” “Sure I am, kid,” says the man in the Kool-Aid man suit. “Look at me! Whoa! Yeah! I’m the Kool-Aid man! I’m red as a cherry! What’s your name, Billy? C’mon, Billy, we’re just trying to have fun at the party.” Billy throws a piece of cake at the man who “isn’t the Kool-Aid man”. The other kids look on in a mixture of shock and wicked admiration. The cake peels from his felt costume slowly and falls to splatter on the ground. “This is the worst birthday ever!” screams Billy. “I wanted the real Kool-Aid man!”

You can tell he’s the real Kool-Aid man because he looks the same as the Kool-Aid. Image Credit: Flickr user K. Todd Storch (CC BY 2.0)

Posted in Color In Food Industry
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Most Related Posts

  • What Is CIELAB Color Space?
  • Spectrophotometers are Essential for Creating Colorful Luggage
  • Human Factors That Affect How We See Colors
  • Gloss Measurement: SPIN vs. SPEX
  • What to Know About Cocoa Powder Color Measurement
  • What Is Photometric Range and Photometry?
  • Spectrophotometers Provide Quality Control Assurance for Powdered Drink Manufacturers
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