Mobile app version of vmapp.org
Login or Join
Angela777

: Name of illusion phenomenon of bordering colors Look at this picture: All the squares are filled with solid color without any gradient, but at the borders between the colors we see as if

@Angela777

Posted in: #Color #ColorTheory

Look at this picture:



All the squares are filled with solid color without any gradient, but at the borders between the colors we see as if gradients were used.

In the past I tried to create similar image by using gradients, but with the time realised that optical illusion gives me the opportunity to create the picture with solid colors without gradients.

I am looking for the name of this phenomenon. Tried to find the name but only "optical illusion" came to results.

10.02% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


Login to follow query

More posts by @Angela777

2 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

 

@Ravi4787994

You need to read Josef Albers' Interaction of Color

The effect you see in your example has many permutations. Albers walks the reader/student through them via a precise and well-crafted set of experiments. His book (now over 50 years old) remains the quintessential guide to understanding the relative nature of color.

As an introduction, Albers writes (emphasis mine):


In visual perception a color is almost never seen as it really is — as it physically is. This fact makes color the most relative medium in art.


Elsewhere, Albers quotes Kandinsky to emphasize the plasticity of color:


What counts is not the what but the how.


The material values of any color (not just value changes within a single tone) are deeply influenced by environment.

Elsewhere in the book he points to the fact that we can isolate things like musical notes to be heard (mostly) without comparative influence. Color is much more difficult to isolate and is, thus, always viewed within the context of relative interaction.

How do we make 1 color 2

In your example, the adjoining light/dark relationships relatively magnify each other. As your eye moves across the color plane it is next effected in the reverse by the value on the opposite side. In between, your eye blends the difference.

To make those shifts even across a space, you have to properly measure the steps. Albers also identifies the guiding principal behind this problem: The Weber-Fechner Law. In short, this tells us that even mathematical progression will yield an uneven gradation. In other words, if the first step moves from 10% brightness to 20%, choosing 30% next will cause your differential to drop off. The proper value should be selected by proportional increase, ie 40%.

The exciting part is that you can bend color in much greater ways by manipulating the same comparative factors. The original cover (above) perfectly articulates the basic concept.

10% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


 

@Cugini998

The illusion is called "mach bands"

See here:
Mach Bands

Excerpt:


The Mach bands effect is due to the spatial high-boost filtering performed by the human visual system on the luminance channel of the image captured by the retina. This filtering is largely performed in the retina itself, by lateral inhibition among its neurons.

The effect is independent of the orientation of the boundary.

10% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


Back to top | Use Dark Theme