White is Green


Robert Boyle
Experiments and Considerations Touching Colors

Newest argument for White is Green based on looking through a prism.

Hal Glicksman
Art Department,
California State University, Long Beach
(Retired)

Looking through the prism as Goethe did, we see white between cyan and yellow in the spectrum, exactly where green is in Newton's spectrum. Color pickers for RGB Computer systems show white as 100% red, green and blue, when in fact, the proportions of white are closer to 30%R 59%G and 11%B. The distribution of spectral energy indicates that white is centered in the spectrum in the same place as the hue of green. A white balance is set by adjusting the red and blue levels until white appears neither warm nor cool, i.e. centered on green. White does not appear green because of the mechanism of color constancy. Our perceptual systems are optimized for seeing the green frequencies while at the same time optimized for separating a single frequency of green from light that is mostly green but contains a mix of frequencies. We are conscious of minute hue distinctions and unconscious of large value differences.

Giving white a place in the spectrum allows hues and values to be plotted on the same plane of color space. This chart of the hue/value relationships of color was created by mapping the hues of the RGB spectrum onto the values of the grayscale. The chart allows the selection of equal value color combinations similar to the harmonies of a traditional artist's color wheel, but in the far greater gamut of hues and values of RGB color, making color selection and matching more intuitive for the general computer user.

For more information, please read the following paper on White is Green that was presented at the International Association of Color AIC Color 97 in Kyoto, Japan in May of 1997.

Please also see additional arguments for "White is Green" as well as the Percept Color Wheel presented at Electronic Imaging '99 San Jose, California, January 1999.

The most recent paper is White is Green - New Schematic Diagrams (PDF format) Presented at AIC Color 2001 in Rochester New York, June 2001. This link will download a functioning version of the triple Venn diagram in Photoshop discussed this paper. The file is a Stuffit archive.