Color Theory for Printing
Foundations for Predictable Color in Print
$34.99
Color is at the heart of modern printing, yet many of the systems used to measure and control it remain poorly explained. Color Theory for Printing provides a clear and practical introduction to the science behind color measurement and communication.
This book builds color understanding step by step, beginning with light and human vision and moving through the tools used every day in print production. It explains how spectral reflectance, viewing conditions, illuminants, measurement geometry, and color spaces work together to describe color in measurable terms.
Rather than presenting formulas without context, the book focuses on how color data is created, what the numbers actually represent, and how they should be interpreted on press. The result is a practical framework for understanding color measurements and making more informed production decisions.
What you will learn:
How light, materials, and human vision
combine to produce color
Why viewing conditions and illuminants matter
How spectrophotometers measure color
What L*a*b* and L*C*h° values really describe
How color difference metrics such as ΔE areused in print production
