why not support the classic engraving marks? that way cellphone + old
book/reproduction = color engraving.

On Mon, 2006-10-16 at 14:40 -0400, Kragen Javier Sitaker wrote:
> On Mon, 16 Oct 2006 12:17:50 +0200, Dave Long wrote:
> > > It would be cool to print out a black-and-white image on, say, a laser
> > > printer, which contained an unobtrusive embedded "watermark" or
> > > "barcode" that contained chroma information for the image --- rather
> > > like what the Apple II did to get NTSC color just by producing a
> > > pattern of 1's and 0's.
> > 
> > Come to think of it, the Apple II scheme turns a well known broadcast 
> > bug (there are dress codes for on-air appearances, as houndstooth and 
> > similar high-frequency fabrics alias into color) into a feature.  I 
> > wonder how much the use of gradients in web graphics is due to 
> > recent-featurism, and how much is in imitation of broadcast graphics, 
> > which have to have smooth gradients -- they'd bleed if one tried to 
> > make a crisp transition.
> 
> That's an interesting question.  My preferred hypothesis is that it's
> the age of calm technology --- one of the disadvantages of the Apple
> ][ scheme was that it could only produce bright, garish colors with
> sharp boundaries between them, and gradients are much more soothing.
> 
> > > Then you could point, say, a cellphone camera at the image, and push a
> > > button, and see the image in color.
> > 
> > Unfortunately (fortunately?) the information between a cellphone camera 
> > and a printout isn't mediated by NTSC, but by regular photons, so it 
> > seems unlikely this would work.
> 
> I didn't mean it would work by accident --- I meant that software in
> the cellphone could decode a chroma signal from a barcode "hidden" in
> the image, for example in the angle and spacing of patterns of
> parallel lines used to approximate a grayscale as in an engraving.
> 
> Venezuelan paper money has areas that appear from a distance to be one
> solid color, but consist of many areas of fine parallel lines at
> different angles.  Presumably the idea is that each area would appear
> a different brightness by raster aliasing if scanned with a
> poor-quality scanner, or printed with a poor-quality printer.
> 
> But the same scheme could be applied to encode more interesting
> information subliminally into the print; perhaps the frequency of the
> lines could represent saturation, and their angle could represent hue.
> 
> 


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