Aha, interesting, I discovered relative CSS colors a few weeks ago and I hit exactly the issue the article mentions: you can’t vary one axis and get perceptual consistency, which makes relative colors a lot less useful (at least for what I want out of them, I’m sure skilled designers don’t have that issue).
I did notice the alternate color spaces but didn’t take the time to look into, so that’s appreciated.
In the lch example it ought to be
calc(l + 90) c h)notcalc(h + 90) c h)right?Aha, interesting, I discovered relative CSS colors a few weeks ago and I hit exactly the issue the article mentions: you can’t vary one axis and get perceptual consistency, which makes relative colors a lot less useful (at least for what I want out of them, I’m sure skilled designers don’t have that issue).
I did notice the alternate color spaces but didn’t take the time to look into, so that’s appreciated.
Very nice article! To bookmarks!