"Pink."
"Pink."
(long before there was a PFA i had my Grenade & Crossbones avatar at DD)
Its white and gold for crying out loud.
I hope that's a mannikin because I'm not seeing any arms either.
Its white and gold, but the black and blue dress looks a lot better.
Nothing tastes as good as healthy feels.
It's back to white & gold for me. Showed it to my wife & she saw white & gold as I was seeing blue & black.
Definitely weird.
(•_•) ..
∫\ \___( •_•)
_∫∫ _∫∫ɯ \ \
Originally Posted by Hockey Guy
I was gonna take it into photoshop and hit it with the color picker but it looks like the article plop posted already did that. I was sure it was gold and white shot in bad light. For those unfamilliar, R0 G0 B0 = Black and R255, G255, B255 = White. The issue is that the picture is balanced way high so the black looks gold, so it's more fuckery than anything.
Last edited by 4Dragons; 02-26-2015 at 10:30 PM.
lol I can't see the white anymore =/
if you start from the bottom and slowly scroll up it appears blue/black. if you see it from the top or whole thing its white/gold
Originally Posted by abrown83
I am now seeing it as entirely blue/black and I can't unsee it. Please send help
I did when you first posted it. It still looked white/gold to me. I didn't think much of it, as I'll often see individual pixels register something much different than the overall hue when using the color picker in Photoshop.
But now I'm seeing them match the color of the dress exactly.
I miss the white/gold dress. Those were much simpler times.
from reddit
This is pretty coolChecking the color of the pixels is meaningless. That's the color of the PICTURE, not of the dress.
Color captured by the camera is what the dress reflected off the incident light. If the incident light isn't white, you get different colors.
Our eyes also saturate to change the white point of the images we see, that is, everything eventually becomes color-balanced. That's one of the reasons why f.lux works. You can also easily perceive this if you remain for some time in a room with a certain color or brightness, and then leave it. Everything will look tinted by the complementary color for a while, until your eyes adapt again. For instance, if you're inside a room with red light, you get a cyan tint afterwards.
This is exploited in the famous Spanish castle "illusion". Also, note that this is the same reason why leaving a dark room we get a glare, or entering a dark room you can't see anything for a bit. This is an entirely physical/chemical phenomenon: photoreceptor are saturated more under high exposure to specific types of light. So calling it an optical illusion may be wrong.
And finally, there's also more subtle post-processing done by the brain.
So there's a lot of things at play here way beyond the simple pixel color.
http://www.johnsadowski.com/big_spanish_castle.php
Originally Posted by abrown83
yes, but why is anderson silva's leg white?!?!
There are currently 2 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 2 guests)