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How to make / buy pure grey paint?


bill_glickman

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Wow, 12% does seem rather dark. Since paint is made out of pigments,

it operates on a CMYK mixing system. I am not sure if you can obtain

an even set of RGB values.

 

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If you're looking for collour neutral grey, then I'd suggest looking

at a Munsell Colour chart and getting a grey which is closest to your

needs.

 

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www.creativepro.com has an interesting write-up on painting one's

environment a light Munsell 8 grey which can be whipped up at the

better paint suppliers. The page also mentioned others who have

achieved grey using their own stated formulae. The light Munsell 8

grey is used for the walls and ceiling of the author's workroom that

holds his graphic monitors.

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Erik,

 

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Thank you for the link - look like interesting reading at morning

tea today!

 

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WG

 

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Bill,

 

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I located the article by typing 'paint munsell 8' in the search box.

The article is entitled 'The darkroom makes A Comeback Part 2'

and in the text is a link to Part 1.

 

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Cheers,

 

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WG

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John, I am using it for grey point calibration for scanning. I want

a reference point of something in my image that has equal RGB

values. I tried the "match a chip method"....but I am unsure if the

outcome is equal amounts of RGB... how can I determine this? I felt

there must be some ready made product that is already "certified"

grey as one of the posters mentioned above...

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Anything resembling paint will most likely change over time because the

pigments are somewhat fugitive but not equally so. Even reference

charts used to white balance broadcast level television cameras need to

be retired from time to time. There is a rather good greyscale chart

from Smethurst in England that might serve your purpose, but if you

regularly subject it to intense light, it may not last forever either.

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Will you be color balancing the lighting in the room as well?

"Neutral" gray is only going to be neutral gray if the ambient

lighting is balanced to your monitor as well, assuming you are

talking about a room for digital work. Most of the rooms I've been

in where this work is done are neutral in tone but have very

subdued ambient lighting -- and the monitors are carefully tuned

with products like the products from <A HREF =

http://www.colorcal.com. ColorVision</A>.

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Thats OK Ellis, even you are allowed a mistake once in awhile :-).

It sounds like Erik is on the right path... someone seems to have pre

made such a paint. It takes the guess work out. I would love to

find that source and just buy some. Erik, it looks like you tried to

post, but then we got nothing?

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Err, sorry, Bill, I was just trying to be a wise ass and closing off

the HTML tags.

 

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First, www.gretagmacbeth.com has some useful information. Then. I

followed its links to one of its re-sellers: www.chromix.com . Gretag

Macbeth has a Colour Checker DC for $279, Ouch! Perhaps it is just

what you are looking for.

 

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Gretag Macbeth mentions Munsell N 7 as being a neutral grey tone to

eliminate colour viewing errors in its light booths.

www.creativepro.com mentioned Munsell N 8 as neutral so there is some

slight difference there.

 

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I guess your best bet to mix your own patch would be to look for a

graphic arts supply shop or production house or a prepress house. The

Munsell colour system is the de facto standard used to define colour

in the prepress world.

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I am sorry. I missed this out. Pantone provides colour swatches with

the corresponding Munsell number. If you go to a graphic arts supply

house, just ask to borrow the Pantone swatch book. You should be able

to find Munsell N 7 or N 8 or whatever value of grey that you need.

It may not be as accurate as a gretag macbeth one due to the print

quality but it is can come close enough.

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