Colorimetric Evaluation of a Reintegration via Spectral Imaging—Case Study: Nasrid Tiling Panel from the Alhambra of Granada (Spain)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Martínez Domingo, Miguel Ángel; López Baldomero, Ana Belén; Tejada Casado, María de la Natividad; Melgosa, Manuel; Collado Montero, Francisco JoséEditorial
MDPI
Materia
color reintegration hyperspectral imaging color difference visual appearance
Fecha
2024-06-14Referencia bibliográfica
Martínez-Domingo, M.Á.; López-Baldomero, A.B.; Tejada-Casado, M.; Melgosa, M.; Collado-Montero, F.J. Colorimetric Evaluation of a Reintegration via Spectral Imaging—Case Study: Nasrid Tiling Panel from the Alhambra of Granada (Spain). Sensors 2024, 24, 3872. https://doi.org/10.3390/s24123872
Patrocinador
MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033Resumen
Color reintegration is a restoration treatment that involves applying paint or colored
plaster to an object of cultural heritage to facilitate its perception and understanding. This study
examines the impact of lighting on the visual appearance of one such restored piece: a tiled skirting
panel from the Nasrid period (1238–1492), permanently on display at the Museum of the Alhambra
(Spain). Spectral images in the range of 380–1080 nm were obtained using a hyperspectral image
scanner. CIELAB and CIEDE2000 color coordinates at each pixel were computed assuming the
CIE 1931 standard colorimetric observer and considering ten relevant illuminants proposed by
the International Commission on Illumination (CIE): D65 plus nine white LEDs. Four main hues
(blue, green, yellow, and black) can be distinguished in the original and reintegrated areas. For
each hue, mean color difference from the mean (MCDM), CIEDE2000 average distances, volumes,
and overlapping volumes were computed in the CIELAB space by comparing the original and the
reintegrated zones. The study reveals noticeable average color differences between the original
and reintegrated areas within tiles: 6.0 and 4.7 CIEDE2000 units for the yellow and blue tiles (with
MCDM values of 3.7 and 4.5 and 5.8 and 7.2, respectively), and 16.6 and 17.8 CIEDE2000 units for
the black and green tiles (with MCDM values of 13.2 and 12.2 and 10.9 and 11.3, respectively). The
overlapping volume of CIELAB clouds of points corresponding to the original and reintegrated areas
ranges from 35% to 50%, indicating that these areas would be perceived as different by observers
with normal color vision for all four tiles. However, average color differences between the original
and reintegrated areas changed with the tested illuminants by less than 2.6 CIEDE2000 units. Our
current methodology provides useful quantitative results for evaluation of the color appearance of a
reintegrated area under different light sources, helping curators and museum professionals to choose
optimal lighting.