Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2015/03/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Larry: You'll notice that the article is a business-oriented article, and its main point is that choosing the right colors for your product packaging (and doing it better than the competition) is going to mean that you get more impulse buys. Which they then stretch to the unsupported conclusions that businesspeople then draw about their employees' creativity. Fine and dandy. We have known for years that color is a powerful psychological stimulus and a powerful advertising tool. But color can also be a distraction, taking your attention away from the subtle content and towards the more obvious. (This ties in well with Ted's quotable quote about photographing clothes vs. souls). So if you want to see the pretty sunset, photograph color. If you want to see the truth, photograph B&W. I don't completely believe that, I'm just pulling your chain. :-) B&W is also a different aesthetic, and I think appreciation for it is to some degree generational. But I still love it, darn it. And I'm encouraged by some younger photographers' "discovery" of B&W. :-) Now the video is a very deceptive marketing ploy. Most color-blind people are color blind because they lack one or more of the pigments that allow the cones to "fire" in response to certain bands of the spectrum. When the brain puts together the neural firings from these pigments, a color-blind person lacks one or more channels of information with which to generate the perception of color. It's similar (in principle) to a CRT computer screen where one of the three color "guns" has gone bad. A color-blind person sees as alike colors where the pigment(s) they lack makes a significant difference between one color and another. So, for instance, red and green can look the same, as a kind of brownish orange. The glasses shown in the video probably have different colored filters for each eye, and/or they cut out the "ambiguous" parts of the spectrum, which will allow the brain to perceive a difference between the colors that normally look alike to the color-blind person--e.g. red and green. Perhaps a tint difference, perhaps a brightness difference. This may help in distinguishing traffic lights, for example. It may be an improvement, and it may even be an aesthetic improvement. But it's not as if they are suddenly "cured." The sunset they see with the glasses may be prettier than before, and it may even be a revelation to them, but it is not as if they suddenly can see the true colors as a person with normal color vision does. Which is what the video cleverly implies. That's snake oil. <http://mashable.com/2015/03/23/glasses-solve-color-blindness/>. --Peter On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 6:46 AM, Larry Zeitlin via LUG <lug at leica-users.org> wrote: > Before you shoot your next B&W film look at this video. > > http://www.psmag.com/health-and-behavior/new-video-reminds-us-how-great-colors-are > Larry Z > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >