2700K Color Temperature to RGB — Warm White Bulb
A color temperature of 2700K (warm white, like a standard incandescent bulb) converts to a warm orange-white RGB value.
How to use this tool
- Enter a color temperature in Kelvin (1000–12000).
- The tool uses the Tanner Helland algorithm to approximate the RGB color.
- Common values: 2700K (incandescent), 4000K (cool white), 6500K (daylight).
2700K is the classic incandescent warm white, producing a cozy amber-white RGB approximation used in lighting design.
Frequently asked questions
- What is color temperature?
- Color temperature describes the hue of a light source on a scale from warm (reddish, low Kelvin) to cool (bluish, high Kelvin). It comes from blackbody radiation physics.
- Is this conversion exact?
- No — it is an approximation by Tanner Helland (2012) that gives perceptually good results for the visible daylight range. Exact conversion requires spectral power distribution data.