Information technology — Office equipment — Colour terminology for office colour equipment

ISO/IEC 17823:2015 provides definitions for colour terms used with office equipment, in particular for use with colour scanning and printing devices that have digital imaging capabilities, including multi-function devices. ISO/IEC 17823:2015 is not intended to replace terms and definitions published in documents or user interfaces issued or created by manufacturers.

Technologies de l'information — Equipement de bureau — Terminologie couleur pour équipement couleur de bureau

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Publication Date
13-Sep-2015
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9599 - Withdrawal of International Standard
Completion Date
01-Jul-2024
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INTERNATIONAL ISO/IEC
STANDARD 17823
First edition
2015-09-15
Colour terminology for office colour
equipment
Terminologie couleur pour équipement couleur de bureau
Reference number
©
ISO/IEC 2015
© ISO/IEC 2015, Published in Switzerland
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting on the internet or an intranet, without prior
written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address below or ISO’s member body in the country of
the requester.
ISO copyright office
Ch. de Blandonnet 8 • CP 401
CH-1214 Vernier, Geneva, Switzerland
Tel. +41 22 749 01 11
Fax +41 22 749 09 47
copyright@iso.org
www.iso.org
ii © ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved

Contents Page
Foreword .iv
Introduction .v
1 Scope . 1
2 Terms and definitions . 1
Annex A (informative) Classification of terms according to definitions in previously
published International Standards . 9
Annex B (informative) Primary colours and typical input in various devices vs market segments 11
Annex C (informative) Alphabetical index .13
Bibliography .15
© ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved iii

Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) and IEC (the International Electrotechnical
Commission) form the specialized system for worldwide standardization. National bodies that are
members of ISO or IEC participate in the development of International Standards through technical
committees established by the respective organization to deal with particular fields of technical
activity. ISO and IEC technical committees collaborate in fields of mutual interest. Other international
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO and IEC, also take part in the
work. In the field of information technology, ISO and IEC have established a joint technical committee,
ISO/IEC JTC 1.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are
described in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular the different approval criteria needed for
the different types of document should be noted. This document was drafted in accordance with the
editorial rules of the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2 (see www.iso.org/directives).
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject
of patent rights. ISO and IEC shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent
rights. Details of any patent rights identified during the development of the document will be in the
Introduction and/or on the ISO list of patent declarations received (see www.iso.org/patents).
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation on the meaning of ISO specific terms and expressions related to conformity
assessment, as well as information about ISO’s adherence to the WTO principles in the Technical
Barriers to Trade (TBT) see the following URL: Foreword - Supplementary information
The committee responsible for this document is ISO/IEC JTC 1, Information technology, Subcommittee
SC 28, Office equipment.
iv © ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved

Introduction
Technical colour terms have been published in various fields of standards such as colour photography,
graphic technology printing and computer graphics. However, no standard colour terms have been
published for office equipment.
As a result, misunderstandings between users and colour office equipment providers can occur when
terms are interpreted differently.
The purpose of this International Standard is to provide terminology for use by office equipment
providers to help customers use their colour equipment effectively.
© ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved v

INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO/IEC 17823:2015(E)
Colour terminology for office colour equipment
1 Scope
This International Standard provides definitions for colour terms used with office equipment, in
particular for use with colour scanning and printing devices that have digital imaging capabilities,
including multi-function devices.
This International Standard is not intended to replace terms and definitions published in documents or
user interfaces issued or created by manufacturers.
2 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the following terms and definitions apply.
2.1
colour balance
adjustment of colour channel gains or processing
2.1.1
grey balance
set of tone values for cyan, magenta and yellow that are expected to appear as an achromatic grey under
specified viewing conditions when printed using the specified printing conditions
Note 1 to entry: The user can choose between the following two practical definitions and one theoretical
definition of grey, depending upon the particular context.
a) practical definitions:
1) a colour having the same CIELAB a* and b* values as the print substrate;
2) a colour that has the same CIELAB a* and b* values as a half-tone tint of similar L* value printed
with black ink;
b) theoretical definition:
1) the colourimetric definition of grey is when the CIELAB a* and b* values are both equal to 0.
[SOURCE: ISO/TS 10128:2009, 3.3, modified]
2.2 black
2.2.1
composite black
printing black with multiple colourants
2.2.2
pure black
black generated only in black colourant in a printing device
2.2.3
rich black
black generated by a mixture of black colourant and other colourants in a printing device
© ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved 1

2.3
calibration
set of operations that establish, under specified conditions, the relationship between values of
quantities indicated by a measuring instrument or measuring system, or values represented by a
material measure or a reference material, and the corresponding values realized by standards
[SOURCE: ISO 14807:2001, 3.11]
2.4
colour appearance
aspect of visual perception by which things are recognized by their colour
[SOURCE: CIE S17/E:2011 ILV, 17-199, modified — “2.” part has been removed.]
2.4.1
brightness
attribute of a visual perception according to which an area appears to emit, or reflect, more or less light
[SOURCE: CIE S17/E:2011 ILV, 17-111]
2.4.2
colourfulness
attribute of a visual sensation according to which the perceived colour of an area appears to be more or
less chromatic
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC 8613-2:1995]
2.4.3
highlight colour
especially light and low chroma colour
2.4.4
metamerism
phenomenon characterized by the difference in colour observed when two specimens visually matching
under a given light source are viewed under another light source with different spectral characteristics
[SOURCE: ISO 4618:2014, 2.157]
2.4.5
vividness
attribute of colour used to indicate the degree of departure of the colour from a neutral black colour
2.5
colour difference
perceived dissimilarity between two colour elements
[SOURCE: CIE S17/E:2011 ILV, 17-206]
2.6 colour encoding
2.6.1
colour palette
fixed set or range of available colours that can be selected
[SOURCE: ISO/TS 16071:2003, 3.8]
2.6.2
full colour
method of representing colours with 3-channel or more, and each channel has 8-bit or more information
Note 1 to entry: Each channel may have 12,16-bit. In ”Commercial printing”, there are multi-channel colour
reproduction such as “CMYKOG”.
2 © ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved

2.6.3
indexed colour
palette colour
colour selection scheme in which the colour index is used to retrieve colour values from a colour table
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC 8632-1:1999, 4.1.62]
2.6.4
named colour
colour with associated colour expression specification
2.6.5
spot colour
single colourant, identified by name, whose printing tone-values are specified independently from the
colour values specified in a colour coordinate system
[SOURCE: ISO 12639:2004, 4.1.10]
2.7
colour management
communication of the associated data required for unambiguous interpretation of colour content data,
and application of colour data conversions, as required, to produce the intended reproductions
[SOURCE: ISO 15076-1:2010, 3.1.11]
2.7.1
characterization
process of relating device-dependent colour values to device-independent colour values
[SOURCE: ISO 12637-2:2008, 2.7]
2.7.2
colour gamut
volume, area, or solid in a colour space, consisting of all those colours that are either
a) present in a specific scene, artwork, photograph, photomechanical, or other reproduction, or
b) capable of being created using a particular output device and/or medium
Note 1 to entry: In reproduction and media applications, only the volume or solid in colour space is regarded as
colour gamut. In applications such as signal lighting, the colour gamut is an area.
[SOURCE: CIE S17/E:2011 ILV, 17-211]
2.7.3
gamut mapping
mapping of the colour space coordinates of the elements of a source image to colour space coordinates
of the elements of a reproduction to compensate for differences in the source and output medium colour
gamut capability
Note 1 to entry: The term “gamut mapping” is somewhat more restrictive than the term “colour rendering”
because gamut mapping is performed on colourimetry that has already been adjusted to compensate for viewing
condition differences and viewer preferences, although these processing operations are frequently combined in
reproduction and preferred reproduction models.
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.22]
2.7.4
International Color Consortium
ICC
industry association formed to develop standardized mechanisms for colour management
[SOURCE: ISO 15930-3:2002, 3.9]
© ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved 3

2.7.5
ICC profile
International Color Consortium’s file format, used to store transforms from one colour encoding to another
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.24, modified — e.g. part has been removed.]
2.7.6
rendering intent
style of mapping colour values from one image description to another
[SOURCE: ISO 15076-1:2010, 3.1.27]
2.8
colour space
geometric representation of colours in space, usually of three dimensions
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.13]
2.8.1
colour space encoding
digital encoding of a colour space, including the specification of a digital encoding method, and a colour
space value range
Note 1 to entry: Multiple colour space encodings may be defined based on a single colour space where the
different colour space encodings have different digital encoding methods and/or colour space value ranges. (For
example, 8-bit sRGB and 10-bit e-sRGB are different colour space encodings based on a particular additive RGB
colour space.)
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.14]
2.8.2
device-dependent colour space
colour space defined by the characteristics of a real or idealized imaging device
Note 1 to entry: Device-dependent colour spaces having a simple functional relationship to CIE colourimetry can
also be categorized as colourimetric colour spaces. For example, additive RGB colour spaces corresponding to
real or idealized CRT displays can be treated as colourimetric colour spaces.
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.17]
2.8.3
device-independent colour space
colour coordinate system defined in terms of the amounts of visual stimuli colour capabilities
independent of the specific device characteristics
[SOURCE: ISO 12637-2:2008, 2.47]
2.9
daylight illuminant
illuminant having the same or nearly the same relative spectral power distribution as a phase of daylight
[SOURCE: IEC 60050, 845-03-11]
2.10
dynamic range
difference between peak white and the black level
[SOURCE: ISO 22493:2014, 4.7.2]
2.11 environment
4 © ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved

2.11.1
adapted white
colour stimulus that an observer who is adapted to the viewing environment would judge to be
perfectly achromatic and to have a luminance factor of unity; i.e. absolute colorimetric coordinates that
an observer would consider to be a perfect white diffuser
Note 1 to entry: The adapted white may vary within a scene.
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.2]
2.11.2
glare
discomfort or impairment of vision experienced when parts of the visual field are excessively bright in
relation to the brightness of the general surroundings to which the eyes are adapted
[SOURCE: ISO 11064-6:2005, 3.7]
2.11.3
surface colour
colour perceived as belonging to a surface from which the light appears to be diffusely reflected or
radiated
[SOURCE: IEC 60050, 845-02-20]
2.11.4
surround
area adjacent to the border of an image, which, upon viewing the image, may affect the local state of
adaptation of the eye
[SOURCE: ISO 12646:2008, 3.1.15]
2.11.5
viewing conditions
description of the surrounding environmental conditions during the process of viewing
[SOURCE: ISO/TS 18173:2005, 2.28]
2.12 grey
2.12.1
composite grey
printing grey with multiple colourants
2.12.2
greyscale
image representation in which each pixel
...


INTERNATIONAL ISO/IEC
STANDARD 17823
First edition
2015-09-15
Colour terminology for office colour
equipment
Terminologie couleur pour équipement couleur de bureau
Reference number
©
ISO/IEC 2015
© ISO/IEC 2015, Published in Switzerland
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting on the internet or an intranet, without prior
written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address below or ISO’s member body in the country of
the requester.
ISO copyright office
Ch. de Blandonnet 8 • CP 401
CH-1214 Vernier, Geneva, Switzerland
Tel. +41 22 749 01 11
Fax +41 22 749 09 47
copyright@iso.org
www.iso.org
ii © ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved

Contents Page
Foreword .iv
Introduction .v
1 Scope . 1
2 Terms and definitions . 1
Annex A (informative) Classification of terms according to definitions in previously
published International Standards . 9
Annex B (informative) Primary colours and typical input in various devices vs market segments 11
Annex C (informative) Alphabetical index .13
Bibliography .15
© ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved iii

Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) and IEC (the International Electrotechnical
Commission) form the specialized system for worldwide standardization. National bodies that are
members of ISO or IEC participate in the development of International Standards through technical
committees established by the respective organization to deal with particular fields of technical
activity. ISO and IEC technical committees collaborate in fields of mutual interest. Other international
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO and IEC, also take part in the
work. In the field of information technology, ISO and IEC have established a joint technical committee,
ISO/IEC JTC 1.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are
described in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular the different approval criteria needed for
the different types of document should be noted. This document was drafted in accordance with the
editorial rules of the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2 (see www.iso.org/directives).
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject
of patent rights. ISO and IEC shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent
rights. Details of any patent rights identified during the development of the document will be in the
Introduction and/or on the ISO list of patent declarations received (see www.iso.org/patents).
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation on the meaning of ISO specific terms and expressions related to conformity
assessment, as well as information about ISO’s adherence to the WTO principles in the Technical
Barriers to Trade (TBT) see the following URL: Foreword - Supplementary information
The committee responsible for this document is ISO/IEC JTC 1, Information technology, Subcommittee
SC 28, Office equipment.
iv © ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved

Introduction
Technical colour terms have been published in various fields of standards such as colour photography,
graphic technology printing and computer graphics. However, no standard colour terms have been
published for office equipment.
As a result, misunderstandings between users and colour office equipment providers can occur when
terms are interpreted differently.
The purpose of this International Standard is to provide terminology for use by office equipment
providers to help customers use their colour equipment effectively.
© ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved v

INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO/IEC 17823:2015(E)
Colour terminology for office colour equipment
1 Scope
This International Standard provides definitions for colour terms used with office equipment, in
particular for use with colour scanning and printing devices that have digital imaging capabilities,
including multi-function devices.
This International Standard is not intended to replace terms and definitions published in documents or
user interfaces issued or created by manufacturers.
2 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the following terms and definitions apply.
2.1
colour balance
adjustment of colour channel gains or processing
2.1.1
grey balance
set of tone values for cyan, magenta and yellow that are expected to appear as an achromatic grey under
specified viewing conditions when printed using the specified printing conditions
Note 1 to entry: The user can choose between the following two practical definitions and one theoretical
definition of grey, depending upon the particular context.
a) practical definitions:
1) a colour having the same CIELAB a* and b* values as the print substrate;
2) a colour that has the same CIELAB a* and b* values as a half-tone tint of similar L* value printed
with black ink;
b) theoretical definition:
1) the colourimetric definition of grey is when the CIELAB a* and b* values are both equal to 0.
[SOURCE: ISO/TS 10128:2009, 3.3, modified]
2.2 black
2.2.1
composite black
printing black with multiple colourants
2.2.2
pure black
black generated only in black colourant in a printing device
2.2.3
rich black
black generated by a mixture of black colourant and other colourants in a printing device
© ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved 1

2.3
calibration
set of operations that establish, under specified conditions, the relationship between values of
quantities indicated by a measuring instrument or measuring system, or values represented by a
material measure or a reference material, and the corresponding values realized by standards
[SOURCE: ISO 14807:2001, 3.11]
2.4
colour appearance
aspect of visual perception by which things are recognized by their colour
[SOURCE: CIE S17/E:2011 ILV, 17-199, modified — “2.” part has been removed.]
2.4.1
brightness
attribute of a visual perception according to which an area appears to emit, or reflect, more or less light
[SOURCE: CIE S17/E:2011 ILV, 17-111]
2.4.2
colourfulness
attribute of a visual sensation according to which the perceived colour of an area appears to be more or
less chromatic
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC 8613-2:1995]
2.4.3
highlight colour
especially light and low chroma colour
2.4.4
metamerism
phenomenon characterized by the difference in colour observed when two specimens visually matching
under a given light source are viewed under another light source with different spectral characteristics
[SOURCE: ISO 4618:2014, 2.157]
2.4.5
vividness
attribute of colour used to indicate the degree of departure of the colour from a neutral black colour
2.5
colour difference
perceived dissimilarity between two colour elements
[SOURCE: CIE S17/E:2011 ILV, 17-206]
2.6 colour encoding
2.6.1
colour palette
fixed set or range of available colours that can be selected
[SOURCE: ISO/TS 16071:2003, 3.8]
2.6.2
full colour
method of representing colours with 3-channel or more, and each channel has 8-bit or more information
Note 1 to entry: Each channel may have 12,16-bit. In ”Commercial printing”, there are multi-channel colour
reproduction such as “CMYKOG”.
2 © ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved

2.6.3
indexed colour
palette colour
colour selection scheme in which the colour index is used to retrieve colour values from a colour table
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC 8632-1:1999, 4.1.62]
2.6.4
named colour
colour with associated colour expression specification
2.6.5
spot colour
single colourant, identified by name, whose printing tone-values are specified independently from the
colour values specified in a colour coordinate system
[SOURCE: ISO 12639:2004, 4.1.10]
2.7
colour management
communication of the associated data required for unambiguous interpretation of colour content data,
and application of colour data conversions, as required, to produce the intended reproductions
[SOURCE: ISO 15076-1:2010, 3.1.11]
2.7.1
characterization
process of relating device-dependent colour values to device-independent colour values
[SOURCE: ISO 12637-2:2008, 2.7]
2.7.2
colour gamut
volume, area, or solid in a colour space, consisting of all those colours that are either
a) present in a specific scene, artwork, photograph, photomechanical, or other reproduction, or
b) capable of being created using a particular output device and/or medium
Note 1 to entry: In reproduction and media applications, only the volume or solid in colour space is regarded as
colour gamut. In applications such as signal lighting, the colour gamut is an area.
[SOURCE: CIE S17/E:2011 ILV, 17-211]
2.7.3
gamut mapping
mapping of the colour space coordinates of the elements of a source image to colour space coordinates
of the elements of a reproduction to compensate for differences in the source and output medium colour
gamut capability
Note 1 to entry: The term “gamut mapping” is somewhat more restrictive than the term “colour rendering”
because gamut mapping is performed on colourimetry that has already been adjusted to compensate for viewing
condition differences and viewer preferences, although these processing operations are frequently combined in
reproduction and preferred reproduction models.
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.22]
2.7.4
International Color Consortium
ICC
industry association formed to develop standardized mechanisms for colour management
[SOURCE: ISO 15930-3:2002, 3.9]
© ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved 3

2.7.5
ICC profile
International Color Consortium’s file format, used to store transforms from one colour encoding to another
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.24, modified — e.g. part has been removed.]
2.7.6
rendering intent
style of mapping colour values from one image description to another
[SOURCE: ISO 15076-1:2010, 3.1.27]
2.8
colour space
geometric representation of colours in space, usually of three dimensions
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.13]
2.8.1
colour space encoding
digital encoding of a colour space, including the specification of a digital encoding method, and a colour
space value range
Note 1 to entry: Multiple colour space encodings may be defined based on a single colour space where the
different colour space encodings have different digital encoding methods and/or colour space value ranges. (For
example, 8-bit sRGB and 10-bit e-sRGB are different colour space encodings based on a particular additive RGB
colour space.)
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.14]
2.8.2
device-dependent colour space
colour space defined by the characteristics of a real or idealized imaging device
Note 1 to entry: Device-dependent colour spaces having a simple functional relationship to CIE colourimetry can
also be categorized as colourimetric colour spaces. For example, additive RGB colour spaces corresponding to
real or idealized CRT displays can be treated as colourimetric colour spaces.
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.17]
2.8.3
device-independent colour space
colour coordinate system defined in terms of the amounts of visual stimuli colour capabilities
independent of the specific device characteristics
[SOURCE: ISO 12637-2:2008, 2.47]
2.9
daylight illuminant
illuminant having the same or nearly the same relative spectral power distribution as a phase of daylight
[SOURCE: IEC 60050, 845-03-11]
2.10
dynamic range
difference between peak white and the black level
[SOURCE: ISO 22493:2014, 4.7.2]
2.11 environment
4 © ISO/IEC 2015 – All rights reserved

2.11.1
adapted white
colour stimulus that an observer who is adapted to the viewing environment would judge to be
perfectly achromatic and to have a luminance factor of unity; i.e. absolute colorimetric coordinates that
an observer would consider to be a perfect white diffuser
Note 1 to entry: The adapted white may vary within a scene.
[SOURCE: ISO 22028-1:2004, 3.2]
2.11.2
glare
discomfort or impairment of vision experienced when parts of the visual field are excessively bright in
relation to the brightness of the general surroundings to which the eyes are adapted
[SOURCE: ISO 11064-6:2005, 3.7]
2.11.3
surface colour
colour perceived as belonging to a surface from which the light appears to be diffusely reflected or
radiated
[SOURCE: IEC 60050, 845-02-20]
2.11.4
surround
area adjacent to the border of an image, which, upon viewing the image, may affect the local state of
adaptation of the eye
[SOURCE: ISO 12646:2008, 3.1.15]
2.11.5
viewing conditions
description of the surrounding environmental conditions during the process of viewing
[SOURCE: ISO/TS 18173:2005, 2.28]
2.12 grey
2.12.1
composite grey
printing grey with multiple colourants
2.12.2
greyscale
image representation in which each pixel
...

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