Middle gray


In photography, painting, and other visual arts, middle gray or middle grey is a tone that is perceptually about halfway between black and white on a lightness scale; in photography, and printing, it is typically defined as 18% reflectance in visible light. This gray reflects exactly 1/5th the number of photons per square unit as compared to a reference white of 90% reflectance.
Middle gray is the universal measurement standard in photographic cameras. To calibrate light meters, whether in a camera or hand held, the 18% gray card was conceived. It is assumed that the measurement taken by a meter gives the exposure for a shot so that some of the light reflected by the object measured is equivalent to middle gray. Because human perception adjusts to the overall brightness level, the perceived middle gray is subjective to the observer. This must be kept in mind when using a camera with a built in light meter. Most scenes reflect just 12% to 13% of incident light falling upon them. Therefore, the camera light meter assumes an 18% gray level. This can easily be observed when one relies solely on the exposure given by a camera with a built in light meter when taking a snow scene - the image will come out dark. Using an 18% gray card as an expose guide will mitigate this error.
In the sRGB color space, CIELAB middle gray is equivalent to 46.6% brightness. In 24-bit color, this is rounded to RGB value or #777777.

History

In the Zone System of Ansel Adams, middle gray is known as "Zone V" in the scale of 11 zones from Zone 0 to Zone X.
As early as 1903, middle gray was defined as the geometric mean intensity between a white and a black intensity that are in a ratio of 60:1. That is equivalent to 12.9% of the white intensity.

Table of middle grays

Below are various "middle" grays as based on various criteria. In the center of the rendering of the "Absolute whiteness" middle gray, a small black and white checkered image has been included which, if viewed from a distance, should look like a gray with exactly 50% whiteness. On a correctly calibrated sRGB monitor, this should appear to be of equal brightness to rgb or #BCBCBC.
Middle gray as defined byRelative whiteness sRGB brightnessCIELAB lightnessgamma correctionRGB value for sRGB monitorsAppearance if viewed in sRGB
Geomean of 60:112.91%39.46%42.63%2.95rgb or #656565
L*a*b*18.42%46.63%50.00%2.44rgb or #777777
18% gray card20.00%48.45%51.84%2.32rgb or #7C7C7C
sRGB21.40%50.00%53.39%2.22rgb or #808080
Mac, pre-OS X 10.628.72%57.23%60.53%1.80rgb or #929292
Absolute whiteness50.00%73.54%76.07%1.00rgb or #BCBCBC