Half a croissant, on a plate, with a sign in front of it saying '50c'
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Colour cube bathroom

sounds expensive
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A colour cube is a representation of the colour gamut of a three-wavelength device (commonly red, green and blue). Each axis represents a different wavelength of additive colour, such that one corner is black, the three neighbouring vertices are red, green and blue, the three neigbouring them are yellow (red+green), purple (red+blue) and turquoise (green+blue) and the opposite corner is white. Every point within the cube represents a different colour. The faces are similarly an array of colours.
Complicated? Please refer to the linked article - which includes a diagram.

With me now? Then I'll continue.
Suppose that one had an approximately cubic room one wished to tile. Perhaps a bathroom. One could go to a tile shop and purchase one each of a great many colours of tile, representing the colours on each face of the cube. They're often neatly arrayed by colour, as if this is what they want you to do.
Then very carefully tile your room.

It almost goes without saying that one should carefully extend the motif to any inset walls, using colours at the appropriate place within the cube.

Further improvements involve the incorporation of chromatically appropriate stained glass and LED lighting.

Loris, May 12 2012

RGB colour space article on wikipedia http://en.wikipedia...iki/RGB_color_space
includes colour cube diagram [Loris, May 12 2012]

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       I believe what I wrote is correct; the RGB model is in a sense intrinsically cubic because the three components are orthogonal (and are generally normalised for the dynamic range of each).
However, you're welcome to adapt my proposal to other colour models to fit non-cubic spaces as necessary. If you have a cylindrical space you may wish to use HSV or HSL[1], while if you have a 4-dimensional bathroom you could decorate it with CMYK hyper-tiles[2].
  

       [1] Of course the definitions of those are much less rigorous and not generally standardised; you could decorate cones and domes too, depending on the model.
[2] Although I suspect that might be a bit much.
Loris, May 13 2012
  


 

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