Apple researching Apple Pencil tech to sample the color of physical objects

Posted:
in General Discussion
Apple is working on new stylus sensor technology that can sample colors from external objects, possibly as a feature for a future Apple Pencil.

Credit: AppleInsider
Credit: AppleInsider


Current Apple Pencil models already use sensors to determine tilt and pressure, which makes for more natural writing or drawing on an iPad. If Apple's patents are any indication, future models could feature even more advanced sensor suites.

In a patent application first filed for in November 2019 and published Thursday, Apple essentially describes an Apple Pencil-type device that could use a suite of light sensors to detect and sample colors on an object.

"The color sensor may have a plurality of photodetectors each of which measures light for a different respective color channel," the patent reads. "The color sensor may also have one or more light-emitting devices. Control circuitry may use the light-emitting devices to illuminate an external object while using the photodetectors to measure reflected light to determine the color of the external object."

Essentially, the patent is describing a sensor that can accurately sample a color. A user may be able to touch the stylus on an object like a shirt, and then use that exact color in a drawing or illustration app.

The stylus could sample colors using a suite of light-emitting devices to emit lights of different colors. A corresponding sensor suite could then detect light in different color channels, and send that data to a connected device like an iPad Pro.

An illustration of the color sampling sensor placed on the opposite side of the writing tip of an Apple Pencil. Credit: Apple
An illustration of the color sampling sensor placed on the opposite side of the writing tip of an Apple Pencil. Credit: Apple


That could obviously be a boon for designers, illustrators and artists who use an Apple Pencil and other Apple products. While there are options to sample the color of physical objects, they require third-party accessories or apps to function.

Color sampling in a stylus is an idea that Apple has explored in the past. In a 2014 patent application, the company contends that a special stylus nib with light sensors could also be used to grab the color of nearby objects.

That previous patent also concerned various other interchangeable nibs or stylus tips, while Thursday's patent application focuses solely on color sampling.

Another interesting difference is that Apple's more recent patent suggests that the color sensor suite could actually be on the side of the stylus opposite the writing or drawing tip. An included patent figure illustrates this configuration.

The patent application Thursday lists Nicholas C. Lewty, Mahdi Nezamabadi, Po-Chieh Hung and Tze Yong Poh as inventors. Of those, only Tze Yong Poh has worked on Apple patent in the past -- specifically relating to optical-sensor technology.

Apple has filed numerous patents applications in the past for future Apple Pencil functionality. That includes patents covering sensors for tracing 3D objects, haptic systems to measure a user's grip, and a full touch-sensitive control suite.

With that being said, Apple patent applications are a poor indication of the company's future product plans and they don't give any indication when new products or features might arrive on a device.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 9
    Phobos7Phobos7 Posts: 63member
    Yes, cyan, magenta, yellow, black...
  • Reply 2 of 9
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    That would basically be a colorimeter.
    JWSCPhobos7tmay
  • Reply 3 of 9
    rain22rain22 Posts: 132member
    Would be the most interesting innovation since Jobs died. 
    JWSC
  • Reply 4 of 9
    BeatsBeats Posts: 3,073member
    Following the news of Apple's Glasses privacy innovation THIS is just another example of Apple's creativity in one day!

    Hope these are true. Exciting times ahead!
    Phobos7stevenoz
  • Reply 5 of 9
    JWSCJWSC Posts: 1,203member
    rain22 said:
    Would be the most interesting innovation since Jobs died. 
    While I think this color sensor will be enormously useful, Apple Watch and it’s expanding capabilities continues to have a profound effect on user’s health and lives.
    Phobos7Rayz2016
  • Reply 6 of 9
    michelb76michelb76 Posts: 618member
    Hope it can work a bit like the I/O Brush MIT had in 2004: https://tangible.media.mit.edu/project/io-brush/
    Not sure how that is patented though.
  • Reply 7 of 9
    fastasleepfastasleep Posts: 6,417member
    Phobos7 said:
    Yes, cyan, magenta, yellow, black...
    No. Why would the subtractive process color model for print have anything to do with this?
  • Reply 8 of 9
    stevenozstevenoz Posts: 314member
    Phobos7 said:
    Yes, cyan, magenta, yellow, black...
    No. Why would the subtractive process color model for print have anything to do with this?
    It probably will be RGB... but if it can convert to CMYK too, it might be a boon for colorists who want to make a quick, printable, color representation on their computer or iPad.

  • Reply 9 of 9
    fastasleepfastasleep Posts: 6,417member
    stevenoz said:
    Phobos7 said:
    Yes, cyan, magenta, yellow, black...
    No. Why would the subtractive process color model for print have anything to do with this?
    It probably will be RGB... but if it can convert to CMYK too, it might be a boon for colorists who want to make a quick, printable, color representation on their computer or iPad.

    You can convert any color to subtractive CMYK process color for print of course, but that's a function of the software you're working in. It doesn't make any sense on the Pencil hardware side of things.
    edited July 2020
Sign In or Register to comment.