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#1 |
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E.B.A.H.
Drives: you wild... Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: In the happy padded room wearing a jacket that makes me hug myself...
Posts: 18,420
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Some color theory this week...
We've all come to know that red is the color of passion, green of envy, blue of sorrow/melancholy, yellow for happiness, etc. etc, but has anyone ever contemplated why we think this? Why do certain colors provoke certain emotions? Is it because we've been conditioned by society to think/react in a specific way? Is it something innate? What would happen if everyone was colorblind tomorrow? As a female, Would you feel different if you couldn't tell if a rose was yellow (friendship) or red (Love)? As a male, would you feel any different if you couldn't tell if your shirts/pants were pastel or non-pastel colors? As a Camaro5 member would you feel any different if no one could tell exactly which color camaro you picked except for white black and gray? |
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#2 |
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Camaro➎ moderator
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Different cultures view colors in different ways. The emotional value behind some colors have simply to do with cultural differences.
The color blind issue, is a little weird. When people talk about colorblindness they dont realize that those people cant distinguish between certain colors. For example blues look green and reds look yellow. However, if you mean what would happen if everything was balck and white. There still would be color distinction. It's not all black and white. There are shades of grey in between. Enough to still be able to distinguish colors from one another. |
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#3 |
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E.B.A.H.
Drives: you wild... Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: In the happy padded room wearing a jacket that makes me hug myself...
Posts: 18,420
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Grayscale has nothing to do with hue (color), but how much white or black is added to the color. you can have three colors that are the exact same grayscale but different hues. They would appear the same color gray, no light or darker than the other two.
But the question is, why do we react to colors. Is it conditioned or innate? |
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#4 |
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Camaro➎ moderator
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like I said. i't a cultural thing. So I would say conditioned.
It's just how we were conditioned to react to certain colors. |
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#5 |
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Voice Of The Voiceless
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Hmm...
As children, our eyes are more sensitive to color than those of an adult. Therefore, children are able to "see" another human's aura. It's been said that our aura changes with our emotions and those emotions are tied to a color, similar to the description Mindz has provided. So, when a mother is looking at her baby, a mother's loving sense will change her aura to red. A child will "see" this and can also sense the mother's love and thus associate to two together. I believe this association is stuck in a person's mind for the remainder of their life. Although as we grow older, our ability to see the aura diminishes, but the association of colors remain.
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#6 |
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E.B.A.H.
Drives: you wild... Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: In the happy padded room wearing a jacket that makes me hug myself...
Posts: 18,420
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Interesting point of view. Being able to see an aura would be cool if we could still do it.
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#7 |
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Orange GM freak
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If you are saying that certaion colors evoke certain emotioins; could you also say the favorite colors of different people somewhat show a personality trait? Meaning people that like yellow are more prone to happiness and blues are more susceptable to sadness.
Just thoughts.
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#8 |
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E.B.A.H.
Drives: you wild... Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: In the happy padded room wearing a jacket that makes me hug myself...
Posts: 18,420
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You could say that. But blue in some cultures means freedom and vastness, not always sadness.
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#9 |
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2G1FC1EV1A9110079
Drives: 2010 2LT/RS, 2013 2SS/RS 1LE Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Arizona
Posts: 4,752
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All i know, is the color pink makes me happy.
That's the only input I have on the subject.
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#10 | |
![]() Drives: 2000 Silverado, Slightly Modded Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Fargo, ND
Posts: 34
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Quote:
Was reading a book on the first nuclear sub to go under the North Pole (USS Nautilus, 1958) the on-board psychologist found out that when under water for extended periods of time the air became “charged” with different ions (positive and negative). The crew felt better and was more upbeat when the air was “positively” charged and the reverse was true when the air had an abundance of negative ions. Whether this is true I haven’t seen anything recently confirming this or any other studies done on it. Have really looked either. My psychology teacher in college found it interesting though. Cool site on what different cultures believe colors mean: http://webdesign.about.com/od/colorc...lorculture.htm
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Cowboy's Rules
1) Never slap a man who's chewin' tobacco. 2) Never kick a cow chip on a hot day. 3) Always drink upstream from the herd. 4) Don't squat with your spurs on. Knowledge is power and power corrupts, Therefore study hard and be evil. One man's "magic" is another man's engineering. Robert A. Heinlein |
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#11 |
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Orange GM freak
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Well that explains why I love food so much. LOL
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#12 | ||
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Truth Enforcer
Drives: anything I can get my hands on Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: anywhere and everywhere
Posts: 22,797
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I had a thought too....
how do you know what color you are truely looking at? for instance, take a piece of blue construction paper..... the color (thru your eyes) that you see as blue might be different if you were looking thru someone elses eyes. say that if you were looking thru my eyes at the same piece of paper and it was green thru my eyes. but I was trained that when I saw that color it was "blue" and if I looked thru your eyes at the paper, it might be red to me (thru your eyes)....
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#13 |
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Voice Of The Voiceless
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To all of the above...
Cosmic...
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#14 | |
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Orange GM freak
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Quote:
I would assume that is why some people like certain colors better than others. On another note colors are made up of wavelengths of light and the different wavelengths produce different colors. So there is some physics involved, but I think your right. It is how they are percieved.
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Last edited by springerpete; 11-11-2009 at 09:37 PM. |
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