User`s guide
Table Of Contents
- Manuals for the Machine
- How This Manual Is Organized
- Contents
- Preface
- How To Use This Manual
- Legal Notices
- All About Color
- Preserving Color Copies
- Introduction to Copying
- Basic Copying Features
- Special Copying Features - Document Layout
- Special Copying Features - Image Adjustment
- Special Copying Features - Scan Settings and Notifications
- Special Copying Features - Image Editing
- Special Copying Features - Color and Image Quality Adjustments
- Memory Functions
- Customizing Settings
- Appendix

xvii
The Complementary Colors
Full and Complementary Colors
Full Colors are described as the colors of the spectrum with the highest clarity and
purity. The combination of two full additive colors results in a very bright color.
These colors are called complementary colors as they complement each other to
produce a very bright color, like the color of light in the daytime.
Rapidly rotating two full subtractive colors on a disc combines the colors and makes
them appear as gray. These colors are called physical complementary colors.
The observation of a full subtractive color in the visual field followed by a rapid shift
to a white area results in the illusion of an entirely different color for a short period
of time. These colors are called psychological complementary colors.
Full colors are arranged on the color wheel such that opposing colors are either
physically or psychologically complementary.
Surprising Effects
The imageRUNNER C3100/C3100N uses complementary colors in the Nega/Posi
mode. When an image consisting of three additive primary colors is scanned into
the machine, it automatically replaces these additive primary colors with their
respective complementary colors before printing a four color image consisting of
the subtractive primary colors (C, M, and Y) and black (K).
Color Wheel