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Coloroid(ATV) to YCbCr(YCC) Converter - Color Space Converter

Coloroid(ATV) color space introduction

Also known as the Coloroid(ATV) color space.There are 3 channels in total, A,range from 10 to 76.T,range from 0 to 100.V,range from 0 to 100.
The Coloroid color system was developed in Hungary between the 1960s and 1980s, primarily for use in architecture.
Known as the Coloroid color system.
Coloroid defines colors using A (Hue), T (Lightness), V (Saturation) to aid architects in color selection based on the visual and psychological effects of colors.
The Coloroid color system is mainly used by architects for selecting harmonious color schemes for buildings.
The Coloroid color system promotes visually harmonious combinations of colors by constraining the use of colors to avoid overly intense or discordant hues.

YCbCr(YCC) color space introduction

Also known as the YCbCr(YCC) color space.There are 3 channels in total,Y,range from 16 to 235.Cb,range from 16 to 240.Cr,range from 16 to 240.
The YCbCr color space was specifically designed for digital television and video compression standards like MPEG and JPEG, aiming to minimize data size while maintaining high-quality imagery during the compression process.
The primary name is YCbCr. It is often confused with YUV, although they are technically different.
The YCbCr color space is typically used in a digital format, expressed as a combination of three component values, like (Y, Cb, Cr). For 8-bit video signals, these components typically range from 16 to 235 for Y, and 16 to 240 for Cb and Cr.
YCbCr is predominantly used in digital video capture, processing, storage, and transmission. It forms the core color space for television broadcasting, DVD videos, and image compression standards such as JPEG.
In the YCbCr color space, Y represents the luminance component, while Cb and Cr represent the chrominance components of blue and red, separated from the Y component, allowing chroma subsampling to reduce data amount. As the human eye is more sensitive to luminance than to chrominance, this separation usually doesn't affect the viewing experience.

You might also want to convert Coloroid color space to these formats: