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Hue

Hue is a fundamental attribute of color that allows us to distinguish color families such as red, green, and blue. In physics, hue roughly corresponds to the wavelength of visible light, with red occupying the long-wavelength end and violet the short-wavelength end of the spectrum. Perceptually, hue is the aspect of color that people name when they say a color is red, blue, or green, and it is influenced by lighting and context.

In most color models used in art, design, and digital imaging, hue is one of three basic

Hue differs from shade, tint, and tone, which describe variations in lightness and/or saturation of a given

Perception of hue can be altered by illumination, viewing conditions, and simultaneous colors, a phenomenon known

attributes,
alongside
saturation
(intensity)
and
brightness
or
lightness.
In
hue-saturation-lightness
(HSL)
and
hue-saturation-value
(HSV)
models,
hue
is
represented
as
an
angle
around
a
color
wheel,
typically
0
to
360
degrees.
Adjusting
hue
changes
the
color
family
while
keeping
saturation
and
brightness
constant,
enabling
smooth
transitions
around
the
wheel.
hue.
Color
wheels
organize
hues
into
primary,
secondary,
and
tertiary
groups,
with
traditional
primaries
varying
by
medium
(for
example,
red,
yellow,
blue
in
pigment
theory;
red,
green,
blue
in
additive
light
systems).
as
metamerism.
Hue
is
thus
a
perceptual
and
physical
property
used
in
color
naming,
matching,
and
specification
in
art,
design,
imaging,
and
digital
media.