gordo
Well-known member
An interesting BBC piece on color perception that printers are hopefully aware of and are able to accommodate: http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-43483788
C = 10; M = 0; Y = 100; K = 0
I'd say that makes the balls mostly yellow. But who cares, except maybe my dog, who'll rip them to shreds regardless of colour.
Who cares? the final customer who the operator doesn't get to hear from until 3 re-runs later
C = 10; M = 0; Y = 100; K = 0
I'd say that makes the balls mostly yellow. But who cares, except maybe my dog, who'll rip them to shreds regardless of colour.
Regardless of gender the human eye can see best in the 530 nm range, or green to the layman, that is also the part of the spectrum that can penetrate the furthest underwater, a remnant of the time we were a aquatic species perhaps?
I think the green sensitivity has more to do with a period of tree dwelling where the hue of green leaves can indicate whether a branch you want to swing from is alive and strong or dead and breakable. It also helps to determine the ripeness of many fruits. That being said I do think there is good evidence for an aquatic period in human evolution ( https://www.ted.com/talks/elaine_mor...m_aquatic_apes )
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