# Mixbox: Practical Pigment Mixing for Digital Painting

Mixbox is a pigment mixing black-box. You pass RGB colors in and get the mixed RGB out. Internally, Mixbox treats the colors as if they were made of actual real-world pigments. It uses the Kubelka & Munk theory to predict the color of the resulting mixture. This way, Mixbox achieves that blue and yellow mix to green, the same way real pigments do. * Paper: https://scrtwpns.com/mixbox.pdf
* Video: https://youtu.be/9egCAxhOHg4
* Talk: https://youtu.be/k91cDhpCOpg
## Usage The simplest way to use Mixbox is with the *lerp* interface: ```c++ #include #include "mixbox.h" int main() { unsigned char r1=252, g1=211, b1=0; // bright yellow unsigned char r2=0, g2=0, b2=96; // deep blue float t = 0.5; unsigned char r,g,b; mixbox_lerp_srgb8(r1,g1,b1, // first color r2,g2,b2, // second color t, // mixing ratio &r,&g,&b); // result printf("%d %d %d\n",r,g,b); } ``` Alternatively, one can use the *latent* interface. This allows mixing multiple RGB colors at once using arbitrary weights: ```c++ float latent1[MIXBOX_NUMLATENTS]; float latent2[MIXBOX_NUMLATENTS]; float latentMix[MIXBOX_NUMLATENTS]; mixbox_srgb8_to_latent(r1,g1,b1,latent1); mixbox_srgb8_to_latent(r2,g2,b2,latent2); for(int i=0;i This code is for non-commercial use only. It is provided for research and evaluation purposes.
If you wish to obtain commercial license, please contact: mixbox@scrtwpns.com