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It is amazing that it has been over 50 years since the first car painted with metallic‐flake pigmented coating was produced, and we still have a great deal to talk about when it comes to gonioapparent coatings. The pigments, which enhance both color changes with viewing angle, highlights, and sparkles, make it very difficult to separate color, texture, and other appearance issues. In our first article, Niels Dekker, Eric Kirchner, Rianne Supèr, Geert‐Jan van den Kieboom, and Roel Gottenbos, all from Akzo Nobel Car Refinishes, talk about “Total appearance differences for metallic and pearlescent materials: contributions from color and texture.” From the data in their study, they were able to create a total appearance score, which correlates with the measurements of color and texture with multiangular instrumental measurements of color, coarseness, and glint. Our next article is a follow‐up on work reported in this journal in 2009. In the October issue [Vol. 34: 375–390, 2009], Shizhe Shen and Roy S. Berns developed methods to determine whether a color difference formula was wellfitting, underfitting, or overfitting visual data when visual uncertainty was considered. The method selected depended on how the uncertainty was reported and the colorimetric sampling of the
Color Research & Application – Wiley
Published: Feb 1, 2011
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