
Originally Posted by
Inkanyezi
Terms that most people don't know the meaning of are tossed around. "CRI" is in fact two different entities altogether, and it is not a physical property, but a subjectively evalutated property. The CRI of a light source is evaluated by a board of people with supposedly good colour vision. It is done with a standardised colour map, not very unlike the colour passport. The board of viewers set a number to the likeness of the colour of each patch as perceived when illuminated with the light source under trial, and a standard light source. The average of those numbers for all patches and all viewers, expressed in hundredths, is the CRI for the light source tested.
The standard for colour temperatures of 5000 K and above is "daylight".
Daylight is an elusive beast. Natural daylight is ever changing, and the standard has to be artificial, with a constant output. Natural daylight, our real daylight, does not have a smooth spectrum (often referred to as "continuous"), which does not necessarily include all visible wavelengths. The standard light source for daylight is usually fluorescent, but also filtered incandescent can mimick daylight. For this a neodymium oxide layer is used to make the spectrum less smooth and more like daylight, and a blue filter to raise colour temperature by cutting red and yellow.
So in fact we do not want a "continuous" spectrum if we wish to render colours as daylight does.
The CRI standard for colour temperatures below 5000 K is a black body.
Any incandescent filament is a close replacement for the black body. That is the reason why incandescent has a high CRI, close to 100. The usual figure mentioned is 99, but you could regard any incandescent light source as CRI 100.
An incandescent light source, CRI 100, cannot, and should not, render colours "truly" as daylight does. The primary reason is that incandescent has a smooth spectrum comprising all wavelengths, with its peak in the red and yellow region, but it is very poor in blue and violet as well. There are also deficiencies in the green part of the spectrum, compared to the standard for daylight. The differences in colour rendition compared to daylight are what we call "metameric mismatch". By passing incandescent through a neodymium filter, we even out that metameric mismatch and can indeed make the incandescent light render "true" colour, resembling daylight. A simple blue filter, the Wratten 82 series does not do that, but can complement the neodymium filter to balance colour temperature to a higher value.
But it does not end there. Our very eyes are not equally sensitive to all wavelengths. Our colour sensitive receptors will not respond equally to the energy of all wavelengths. This is purportedly corrected in our brain, but in essence, we have three kinds of receptors, most sensitive to a rather broad band of wavelengths around red, green and blue. Those are the same colours that are filtered by the Bayer filter in our cameras, and the same as emitted from our computer screens; the three additive colours. There are differences in perception between different people, not only that some may be colour blind, but we don't see the same colours as our neighbours do.
The CRI chart of colour patches are therefore compared, subjectively, by a board of observers, setting a number to just how much likeness between the one lit by the source to be evaluated and the one lit by the standard source. Smoothness of spectrum or continuity is disregarded here, it has no meaning in a discussion about quality of light and colour rendering indexes.
And our images, as long as looked at on a screen, will always be discontinuous, comprised of basically three colours, but light in nature as well will be received by our brain as those same three colours, because those are the colours to which our receptors in the eye are tuned.
If you wish "true" colour, such as perceived when your subject is illuminated by "daylight", you must use a light source of 5000 K or above with a high CRI, but if you want "true" colour, as perceived when illuminated by incandescent, you must use an incandescent source or one that mimicks incandescent sufficiently well. In the latter case it would not always need to be continuous, but have the same mix of the three basic colours as incandescent. However, fluorescence from your subject may cause metameric mismatch, when the spectrum is not exactly the same, as the colour from the illuminated surface does not necessarily correspond to the colour of the light source. Particularly when there is a substantial portion of light in the blue to violet part of the spectrum, fluoresced colour of lower wavelength from illuminated surfaces may be present.
Whether a lamp is LED or fluorescent tube is irrelevant, but its CRI is the crucial factor – together with colour temperature. A lamp with colour temperature below 5000 K cannot, and should not, render colours similar to daylight, unless its CRI is much lower than 100. A neodymium filter usually gives the incandescent lamp a CRI of between 70 and 80. Its crooked spectral curve then will be similar to that of "daylight", the standardised daylight which is compared to the light emitted from our closest star, the Sun, a hydrogen fusion nuclear reactor, filtered through the atmosphere. The Sun's radiation is not smooth even in outer space, and our atmosphere scatters it and cuts off a variety of wavelengths as well as emphasising other wavelengths.