Higher color temperatures (4,600K or more) appear blue-white and are called cool or daylight colors. ![]() Lower color temperature light sources are called “warm” because they emit red, orange and yellow color, whereas higher color temperature light sources are called “cool” because they are on the violet and blue end of the color spectrum.īelow is a rundown of the color temperatures in light sources: ![]() As the temperature increases, the horseshoe will start to glow different colors from red, then orange, then yellow, then white, and, finally, it will emit a bluish-white color. Just take, for example, a blacksmith heating up an iron horseshoe. As the temperature increases, the object changes colors and emits certain colors of that light. ![]() Temperature of light, measured in Kelvin (K), is a numerical measurement of the color that’s emitted when an object is heated in a high enough temperature. For those unfamiliar with lighting temperatures and colors, what do they mean?
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