adam7027
(adam7027)
4
I would consider these:
up to 1500K: lava red
1500K to 2500K: (based on taste, any word with the meaning ‘very’ goes here…) warm white
2500K to 3300K: warm white
3300K to 4000K: soft white
4000K to 4500K: warm neutral white
4500K to 4800K: true neutral white
4800K to 5500K: cool neutral white
5500K to 6500K: cool white
6500K to 8000K: cold white
8000K to 10000K: (based on taste, any word with the meaning ‘very’ goes here…) cold white
10000K and upwards: sky blue
These titles are only suitable, if the examined light source has enough CRI (90, preferably 95+), otherwise, I would simplify the above:
4000K to 5000K is neutral white, and anything outside this is correspondingly warm/soft or cool/cold white.
Neutral white is a roughly determined condition, when all parts in the visible spectrum gets a proportionally close intensity to each other (for me, this also means, that I don’t like to call a below 75 CRI light neutral - especially for the already high deep blue spike, which is fairly common among those at 5000K).
I’d call high CRI cool white as pure white as well.
Also, daylight is a very vague title:
overcast day (sun covered by various thickness clouds) is 6000K to 8000K
clear sky is around 10000K or rather more
sunlight without air (e.g. viewed on the Moon) is 5700K,
midday sunlight with air on 0m above sea level is maybe around 4800K
late afternoon sunlight is mostly 3500-4000K-ish
sunset is not more than about 2200K