CRI, TLCI, and SSI: Understanding Light Quality and Accuracy

How to evaluate lighting beyond brightness and color temperature.

Introduction

Two LED panels can both claim “5600 K daylight,” yet render skin tones completely differently — one flattering and lifelike, the other sickly green or magenta.
The difference lies not in color temperature, but in spectral quality — how evenly the light reproduces all visible wavelengths.

To quantify that, the industry uses three main metrics: CRI, TLCI, and SSI.

These aren’t marketing buzzwords; they’re scientific systems that tell cinematographers and photographers how accurately a light reveals color to a camera.
In this guide, we’ll demystify them — what they mean, how they’re measured, and how to use them in real-world lighting decisions.


1. What Does “Light Quality” Really Mean?

Light quality is not just about softness or direction — it’s also about color fidelity:
how faithfully the light reproduces colors in a scene compared to a neutral reference.

A high-quality light renders all hues (especially skin tones) consistently and predictably.
A poor-quality light distorts colors, creating shifts in red, green, or magenta that are hard to fix later.

Spectral quality is measured by analyzing the Spectral Power Distribution (SPD) — a graph showing how much energy the light emits at each wavelength from ~380 nm (violet) to ~780 nm (red).


2. Why Spectral Quality Matters for Cameras

Human eyes adapt instantly to color shifts — cameras don’t.
Sensors have fixed RGB spectral sensitivities, so if a light under-represents certain wavelengths, those colors will look muted or inaccurate even if white balance appears correct.

Example:

  • A cheap LED might produce the right Kelvin value but lack red energy → skin looks pale or magenta.
  • Another might spike in green → everything feels sickly.

Accurate lighting ensures white balance behaves predictably and grading stays consistent across fixtures.


3. The Three Major Standards

MetricFull NameDeveloped ByFocusTypical Range
CRIColor Rendering IndexCIE (1930s–1960s)Human vision fidelity0–100
TLCITelevision Lighting Consistency IndexEBU (2012)Camera sensor fidelity0–100
SSISpectral Similarity IndexAcademy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences (2016)Spectral match to reference0–100

Each metric evolved to address shortcomings of the one before it.


4. CRI – Color Rendering Index

Definition

CRI (Ra) compares how a light source renders 8 standard pastel color samples (R1–R8) against a reference illuminant (blackbody or daylight) at the same CCT.

Scale

0 = terrible, 100 = perfect match.

CRI RangeQualityDescription
95–100ExcellentStudio / film lighting
85–94GoodProfessional LED panels
70–84FairConsumer lighting
<70PoorNoticeable color distortion

Extended CRI

Modern versions include R9–R15, adding saturated reds (R9), skin tones, and blues that basic CRI misses.
R9 (deep red) is especially important — low R9 values produce lifeless skin.

Limitations

  • Designed for human vision, not camera sensors.
  • Only evaluates a few color samples.
  • Fails to capture spectral spikes common in LEDs or fluorescents.

Hence, a light can score 95 CRI yet still look off on camera.


5. TLCI – Television Lighting Consistency Index

Background

The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) created TLCI to evaluate how cameras respond to light.

How It Works

  • Measures the full spectrum of a light.
  • Feeds data through a camera spectral sensitivity model and a standardized matrix.
  • Produces a single score from 0 – 100 indicating how much correction would be needed in post.
TLCI ScoreMeaning
90–100Excellent – minimal/no correction needed
85–89Good – small color tweak acceptable
70–84Acceptable – noticeable cast, fixable
50–69Poor – major color correction required
<50Unusable for broadcast

TLCI is far more reliable for LED and modern digital workflows because it measures how light interacts with cameras, not eyes.


6. SSI – Spectral Similarity Index

The New Standard for Cinematography

Developed by the Academy’s Science and Technology Council, SSI compares a test light’s entire spectral distribution to a reference illuminant:

  • Tungsten (3200 K) or
  • Daylight (D55, D65).

What Makes SSI Different

  • Evaluates spectral match, not just color samples.
  • Provides dual scores: one vs Tungsten reference and one vs Daylight reference.
  • Includes spectral graphs for full analysis.
SSI RangeQualityNotes
90–100Excellent spectral matchRare, almost identical
80–89Very goodHigh-end cinema LEDs
70–79ModerateUsable with color correction
<70PoorMismatched spectrum, visible shifts

Why SSI Matters

Two 5600 K lights can share identical CCT but yield different SSI values — meaning they won’t match visually or grade consistently.
SSI reveals this by analyzing spectral gaps (often in cyan, magenta, or deep red wavelengths).


7. Comparing CRI, TLCI, and SSI

FeatureCRITLCISSI
Designed ForHuman visionCameras / TVCinematography & LEDs
Measures8–15 color samplesFull spectral modelFull spectrum comparison
ReferenceBlackbody / DaylightBroadcast cameraIdeal illuminant (D55/Tungsten)
Output0–1000–1000–100
Interprets TintNoYesYes
Detects Spectral SpikesLimitedModerateExcellent
Preferred UseGeneral color fidelityStudio / broadcast LEDCinema / film lighting QA

In modern production, SSI has largely become the gold standard for high-end film and HDR workflows, often used alongside TLCI for consistency.


8. Spectral Power Distribution (SPD) and Real Examples

1. Tungsten Light (3200 K)

  • Smooth, continuous SPD.
  • Nearly perfect CRI, TLCI, SSI (~100).
  • Ideal for reference calibration.

2. HMI / Daylight

  • Strong blue peak but broad spectrum.
  • CRI ~95, SSI ~90 (vs D55).

3. Cheap White LED

  • Strong blue spike with narrow phosphor bump.
  • CRI ~80, TLCI ~70, SSI ~60.
  • Skin tones appear magenta/green and lack depth.

4. High-End RGBWW Panel

  • Tunable spectrum using multiple phosphors.
  • CRI 95+, TLCI 95+, SSI 85–90.
  • Balanced across camera sensors.

9. How to Read Manufacturer Specs

When evaluating lights, look for:

  • CRI (Ra + R9) both listed.
  • TLCI ≥ 90 for professional work.
  • SSI (Tungsten and Daylight) charts provided.
  • Spectral graph that shows smooth distribution without sharp gaps.

If a product lists only “CRI = 95” with no R9, TLCI, or SSI data — treat it skeptically.


10. Matching Multiple Lights

Mixing lights with different spectral qualities can cause problems even if they share the same CCT.

Example:

  • Key light: LED panel (5600 K, SSI 85).
  • Fill light: Fluorescent (5600 K, SSI 70).

→ On camera, skin tones will shift between them because one emits less deep red or cyan energy.

Use color meters (e.g., Sekonic C-800) to measure and match both CCT and SSI across all fixtures.


11. How Poor Light Quality Affects Skin Tones

Human skin is especially sensitive to red wavelengths (~600–700 nm).
Lights with low R9 or missing red spikes make skin look:

  • Chalky or gray under neutral balance.
  • Magenta or green when corrected in post.

High-SSI or high-R9 lights maintain natural warmth and depth — crucial for HDR and Rec.2020 workflows where small hue shifts are amplified.


12. Modern LED Innovations

Multi-Channel Engines

RGBWW, RGBACL, or RGBWAF systems blend 5–6 emitters to fill spectral gaps.
This yields high CRI/TLCI and consistent SSI across CCTs.

Calibration Profiles

Manufacturers like ARRI Orbiter, Aputure Nova, and Litepanels Gemini store internal spectral data to maintain accuracy when you adjust CCT or gels digitally.

SSI Matching Modes

Some fixtures allow direct SSI match — you can measure a reference light, input its SSI target, and the LED automatically tunes its spectrum to match.


13. Measuring Tools

DeviceMeasuresNotes
Sekonic C-800 / C-700CCT, CRI, TLCI, SSI, ΔuvIndustry standard handheld meter
Asensetek Lighting PassportSPD graphs via phonePortable spectrometer
Uprtek MK350Full-spectrum with CIE plotsBroadcast QC use
Calibrated Reference SensorsLab-gradeUsed in manufacturer testing

Always measure key lights first; background or accent lights can vary creatively once skin tone fidelity is locked.


14. Interpreting SSI Results

SSI outputs both a numeric score and a spectral similarity graph.

  • Sharp dips = missing wavelengths (problematic for rich color rendering).
  • Smooth, continuous curve = balanced emission.

Compare Tungsten SSI and Daylight SSI:

  • High Tungsten SSI (>90): warm sources or gels.
  • High Daylight SSI (>85): cool sources or HMIs.

If both are moderate (70–80), the light is flexible but not a perfect spectral match to either reference.


15. Why SSI Matters for HDR and Rec.2020

Wide-gamut workflows amplify subtle color errors.
A 3 % green spike invisible in Rec.709 can cause noticeable hue drift in Rec.2020 or HDR.

High-SSI lighting ensures consistent spectral coverage across expanded color spaces, maintaining accurate saturation and highlight hues — essential for HDR mastering and VFX integration.


16. Beyond SSI – Future Metrics

Researchers are developing even more advanced indices:

  • TM-30-18 (IES): uses 99 color samples + hue fidelity & gamut.
  • CQS (Color Quality Scale): balances fidelity and preference.
  • Iesna Rf/Rg: splits fidelity vs gamut rendering.

However, SSI remains the practical cinematography standard because it’s simple, consistent, and camera-relevant.


17. Practical Takeaways

✅ Choose lights with:

  • CRI ≥ 95 (and R9 > 90)
  • TLCI ≥ 90
  • SSI ≥ 85 (daylight/tungsten target)

✅ Use a color meter to match CCT and SSI across your kit.
✅ Always test new fixtures on skin tones before production.
✅ In mixed environments, balance lights with gels or RGBWW tuning.
✅ For HDR and Rec.2020 work, prioritize SSI and TLCI over CRI alone.


Conclusion

Brightness and color temperature tell you how a light looks; CRI, TLCI, and SSI tell you how it behaves.

They measure fidelity — the honesty of a light source in reproducing the world’s colors faithfully on camera.
High-quality lights maintain consistency across spectral peaks; poor ones distort your image long before you reach post-production.

For cinematographers, understanding these metrics isn’t just about numbers — it’s about trust.
You’re trusting that what you light on set will look exactly as intended in the final image.

👉 Next in the Luminxel Lighting Series: