rob2218 wrote:
I got this client who's a stickler for 'color' and how it looks.
You'll need to tell your client to chill out, as there is no accurate color other than in a laboratory setting. All is perception and affected by the ambient lighting, whether artificial or natural. For outdoors, the perceived color of any object changes at every hour of every day and with the weather and surrounding environment.
Just point the client to the image-gone-wild from a year or two ago of the woman in the gold and blue - or was it white and black - dress that took over the internet and talk shows. Our eyes need context to determine (guess) what is true white or black and calibrate from there.
Our eyes are also easily tricked. If you have a USA flag, for example, that the viewer expects to be pure red, white and blue but actually color it slightly differently - it will affect the viewer's perception of all other colors in the image.
Explain to the client that there is a reason that paint stores such as Sherwin Williams have 'light boxes' for you to put color chips in and view them under different lighting conditions - where the color chip looks different in every light box. No one light is 'correct' - just approximating the customer's anticipated environment.
Good luck. Clients who want things like this are probably impossible to please.
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