How well do you see color?
http://www.xrite.com/custom_page.aspx?PageID=77
I got a score of 8 in a first try. Not too bad, but not perfect.
Online Color Challenge
- tachzusamm
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Re: Online Color Challenge
4 on first try!
And I thought men had only 4 bits for color.
I'm leaving my job and starting a career in interior decoration.
And I thought men had only 4 bits for color.
I'm leaving my job and starting a career in interior decoration.
Chacal
"The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is an attribute of the strong."
-- Mahatma Gandhi
"The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is an attribute of the strong."
-- Mahatma Gandhi
Re: Online Color Challenge
Only 27 the first try. Then I got a perfect score the second time!
"It is in self-limitation that a master first shows himself." - Goethe
Re: Online Color Challenge
I have I scored 99
- Christopher
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Re: Online Color Challenge
I have 15 on first try.
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Re: Online Color Challenge
I got an 11 on the first try
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Re: Online Color Challenge
8 on first try... this was very interesting.
- tachzusamm
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Re: Online Color Challenge
Lol. Maybe we only miss a checksum unit...Chacal wrote:And I thought men had only 4 bits for color.
But it really DOES depend on X chromosomes: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colour_blindness
Now, umm... hey friend, you know that... how should I say... that you've selected green as your head color?J'Kla wrote:I have I scored 99

- Technical note: Show Spoiler
Re: Online Color Challenge
184 - no surprise there.
I've tried, on a couple occasions in the past, to create a personal colour correction profile, which might compensate a little, but never had much success.
Maybe these results may help, next time I decide to have a go at it...
Problem is; I don't think it's only a matter of photoreceptor response curves, which would be easy to remap; but just as much one of how the brain processes the data, with a whole host of factors affecting impression, not least of all being fill areas and local and global surrounding image balance.
After all: A monitor really only have three wavelengths and colour blindness test cards still works, when displayed on them...
On that bar chart: Does anybody else see (other than my usual colour-blindness-induced sudden shifts in hue along the spectrum, between areas with little change; which you won't see) individual scattered columns, that appear to have drastically lower value than their neighbours?
I've tried, on a couple occasions in the past, to create a personal colour correction profile, which might compensate a little, but never had much success.
Maybe these results may help, next time I decide to have a go at it...
Problem is; I don't think it's only a matter of photoreceptor response curves, which would be easy to remap; but just as much one of how the brain processes the data, with a whole host of factors affecting impression, not least of all being fill areas and local and global surrounding image balance.
After all: A monitor really only have three wavelengths and colour blindness test cards still works, when displayed on them...
On that bar chart: Does anybody else see (other than my usual colour-blindness-induced sudden shifts in hue along the spectrum, between areas with little change; which you won't see) individual scattered columns, that appear to have drastically lower value than their neighbours?