A study of colour - Part 1: RGB - The additive colours
Jpegs use the three primary colours RGB in the Additive Colour Model It turns out there are a lot of ways to identify colour. We learn early on how to identify colours - the primary Crayola crayon box carries green, yellow, orange, red, blue, purple, brown, and black. As we advance into larger colour palettes, we find there are several shades of each with a white thrown in. Then, when it comes to painting, the world of colour opens up to us as we find we can mix paints to produce an almost infinite range of colours. We have to draw a line between analogue colour (film) and digital colour (computer). Film produces continuous colours, albeit with a limited spectrum compared to what modern digital cameras can capture. Colour information from digital sensors is based on integers and is not continuous in nature. To put that more succinctly, analogue deals with real numbers with every imaginable decimal between any two numbers, while digital has only whole number...