"As someone from the field of data analytics, which heavily utilizes visualizations, I have been delighted with this book. It is well laid out to provide a neophyte with all the knowledge and tools to be able to take that information and apply it to aid in creating colorful visualizations that best impart information, in a wide range of subtle ways. The section on color range deficiencies and adjusting color choices to ensure anyone can get full comprehension of my graphics was an unexpected bonus. This book feels like it should be on the must read list for any professional who uses color in their work." --Sue Hayden, Data Process Engineer
"A much-needed guide for scientists of all stripes and for anyone interested in the biology of color vision and the artistic interplay of colors in any setting. The book is well-written and engaging. It is unusual because it is both scholarly and accessible. Each chapter is self-contained and remarkably well-referenced. The opening chapters on color models, color vision, and defining the color gamut lay the foundation for understanding how digital media specialists can use color to create effective and harmonious presentations. The case studies and practical presentations make this a training book as well. My perspective on digital media and my own presentations have been advanced by this scholarly and pragmatic text." --Daniel Schmitt, Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University
"I have attended many of Theresa-Maries SIGGRAPH courses on color selection over the years, and kept her course notes around as references. When the first edition of this book came out, I was thrilled because it was so nice to have everything collected in one easy-to-read, easy-to-store, easy-to-understand place. The first edition immediately went on my closest-to-my-desk bookshelf.
Now the second edition is out. It is longer, physically larger, and has brilliant color on almost every page.
There are many things new in the second edition, too many to mention here. But one new topic with which I was particularly intrigued was the use of ChatGPT to generate color sequences. The exact prompt used is shown in the book. (Thank goodness! I would not have thought to phrase it so well.) ChatGPT then generated eight diverging color options complete with hex codes. But, as could be expected, some of the ChatGPT selections were inaccurate in terms of systematic color sequencing. The author then shows how the freely-available Adobe Color app can be used to clean up the ChatGPT suggestions. I can hardly wait to try this myself!
I also found the books 5-step process to colorizing a data visualization to be useful:
1. Establish data classes for visualization and key color for visualization
2. Select color rule, color harmony per criteria of your data.
3. Build color scheme. A color suggestion tool might be helpful.
4. Check and revise due to color deficiency, contrasts, or any pre-existing conditions.
5. Apply color scheme to data visualization. Some modifications might result.
When you think about it, these steps should be obvious, but I am pretty sure they are not, at least not to most of us. Plugging these rules, especially #3, into the use of generative AI would then give a practitioner a fighting chance at generating data visualizations that just work. It is a Data World out there. It is nice to go into it armed with such good tools as this book encompasses. Now it is the second edition that occupies a place of honor on my closest-to-my-desk bookshelf." --Mike Bailey, Professor of Computer Science, Oregon State University, USA