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  2. Color balance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_balance

    The left half shows the photo as it came from the digital camera. The right half shows the photo adjusted to make a gray surface neutral in the same light. In photography and image processing, color balance is the global adjustment of the intensities of the colors (typically red, green, and blue primary colors). An important goal of this ...

  3. Gray's paradox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gray's_Paradox

    Gray's Paradox is a paradox posed in 1936 by British zoologist Sir James Gray. The paradox was to figure out how dolphins can obtain such high speeds and accelerations with what appears to be a small muscle mass. Gray made an estimate of the power a dolphin could exert based on its physiology, and concluded the power was insufficient to ...

  4. Gray card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gray_card

    A gray card is a middle gray reference, typically used together with a reflective light meter, as a way to produce consistent image exposure and/or color in video production, film, and photography. A gray card is a flat object of a neutral-gray color that derives from a flat reflectance spectrum.

  5. G7 Method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G7_Method

    The G7 Method is a printing procedure used for visually accurate color reproduction by putting emphasis on matching grayscale colorimetric measurements between processes. . G7 stands for grayscale plus seven colors: the subtractive colors typically used in printing (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black) and the additive colors (Red, Green, and Blu

  6. Grayscale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grayscale

    Here is an example of color channel splitting of a full RGB color image. The column at left shows the isolated color channels in natural colors, while at right there are their grayscale equivalences: Composition of RGB from three grayscale images. The reverse is also possible: to build a full-color image from their separate grayscale channels.

  7. Archie Gray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archie_Gray

    Born in Durham, Gray joined Leeds United at under-9 level. [2] [4] He progressed rapidly through the academy, and an agreement had to be met between Leeds United and Gray's school, the St John Fisher Catholic High School in Harrogate, for Gray to miss classes in order to train with the first team, at the request of then-manager Marcelo Bielsa.

  8. Talk:Color balance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Color_balance

    I just sent "white balance" to redirect here, instead of to "color temperature," where it redirected before. “White balance” a.k.a. “color balance” is a bit different from “color temperature”, in that temperature is a one-dimensional value, whereas balance can also be shifted towards green or magenta.

  9. Gray graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gray_graph

    In the mathematical field of graph theory, the Gray graph is an undirected bipartite graph with 54 vertices and 81 edges. It is a cubic graph : every vertex touches exactly three edges. It was discovered by Marion C. Gray in 1932 (unpublished), then discovered independently by Bouwer 1968 in reply to a question posed by Jon Folkman 1967.