Delta E is a standard measurement that evaluates and quantifies the difference between the colors that appear on your monitor. It was created by the International Commission on Illumination (Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage) to help professionals make informed decisions when purchasing color-accurate monitors. The closer to 0 the Delta E measurement is, the better the color on a monitor is because there are fewer differences between colors. While the full scale is 0 to 100, if the range on a monitor is above 3, the differences will be clear, and your work will not be color accurate.
The image to the right shows the Delta E color bases that determine the range on a monitor. Red, Green, and Blue, often known as RGB, are familiar based on color spaces, but White is also an important factor for the Delta E range. It is more complex than the regular color spaces because it is the full range of colors that are achievable on a monitor, beyond what is visible to the human eye.
The term “Delta E” means a difference in sensation or, in relation to colors, the difference in colors. If we break down the phrase, Delta is the Greek term that means an “incremental change of a variable,” and the E stands for the German word “Empfinding,” which means “sensation.”