We can all agree it is butt fugly, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:blue/black np here. Of course they are different blacks. All blacks are different in textiles (ever try to match a random pair of black pants and a black jacket that aren't designed to be a suit?) The black of the lace is not the sameas the black of the chair. But the lace on the dress is not gold.
Those of us who see the dress as blue/black are compensating for the way the photograph washes out the dress.
No. The dress IS blue and black.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am dying to see the blue and black. I keep going back and all I see is gold and white.
+1
Here:
Can you make it white and gold for me? Please?
Here:
This is the only picture so far that sorta looks gold and white, and the white looks more like a super faded blue. The picture looks very washed out, did you edit this picture?
I found it online, it has been overexposed. I have seen it looking both ways though and this is close approximation of what the dress looks like in white/gold. Except the gold is a bit darker when I see it in the original photo
Anonymous wrote:blue/black np here. Of course they are different blacks. All blacks are different in textiles (ever try to match a random pair of black pants and a black jacket that aren't designed to be a suit?) The black of the lace is not the sameas the black of the chair. But the lace on the dress is not gold.
Those of us who see the dress as blue/black are compensating for the way the photograph washes out the dress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oh come on PP.I'm a blue-seer, but if you don't think lighting affects color, you have never edited a photo in your life. The dress is objectively blue because there are other photos in other lighting that show it to be blue, not because someone used a color picker function on a badly lit picture in a piece of software.
White / gold seer here, and I get that the actual dress is a fairly dark blue and black, but what I'm curious about is what colors are in THIS picture. I'd love for the blue/black folks to chime in on what they mean by 'blue'. Are we talking a pale blue or the saturated blue of the other pictures?
Regardless I'm really looking forward to the biologist chiming in on what genetic differences lead to these perceptual variations.
Me too! It's definitely not a gender differential at least from my tiny pool of office coworkers. I wonder if there something about how you interpret the backlighting and the shading as being whether you're used to more natural light or use tomorrow to finish the light. Regardless, I still just see white and gold. Even though I know I'm wrong!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oh come on PP.I'm a blue-seer, but if you don't think lighting affects color, you have never edited a photo in your life. The dress is objectively blue because there are other photos in other lighting that show it to be blue, not because someone used a color picker function on a badly lit picture in a piece of software.
White / gold seer here, and I get that the actual dress is a fairly dark blue and black, but what I'm curious about is what colors are in THIS picture. I'd love for the blue/black folks to chime in on what they mean by 'blue'. Are we talking a pale blue or the saturated blue of the other pictures?
Regardless I'm really looking forward to the biologist chiming in on what genetic differences lead to these perceptual variations.
Me too! It's definitely not a gender differential at least from my tiny pool of office coworkers. I wonder if there something about how you interpret the backlighting and the shading as being whether you're used to more natural light or use tomorrow to finish the light. Regardless, I still just see white and gold. Even though I know I'm wrong!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oh come on PP.I'm a blue-seer, but if you don't think lighting affects color, you have never edited a photo in your life. The dress is objectively blue because there are other photos in other lighting that show it to be blue, not because someone used a color picker function on a badly lit picture in a piece of software.
White / gold seer here, and I get that the actual dress is a fairly dark blue and black, but what I'm curious about is what colors are in THIS picture. I'd love for the blue/black folks to chime in on what they mean by 'blue'. Are we talking a pale blue or the saturated blue of the other pictures?
Regardless I'm really looking forward to the biologist chiming in on what genetic differences lead to these perceptual variations.
Me too! It's definitely not a gender differential at least from my tiny pool of office coworkers. I wonder if there something about how you interpret the backlighting and the shading as being whether you're used to more natural light or use tomorrow to finish the light. Regardless, I still just see white and gold. Even though I know I'm wrong!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oh come on PP.I'm a blue-seer, but if you don't think lighting affects color, you have never edited a photo in your life. The dress is objectively blue because there are other photos in other lighting that show it to be blue, not because someone used a color picker function on a badly lit picture in a piece of software.
White / gold seer here, and I get that the actual dress is a fairly dark blue and black, but what I'm curious about is what colors are in THIS picture. I'd love for the blue/black folks to chime in on what they mean by 'blue'. Are we talking a pale blue or the saturated blue of the other pictures?
Regardless I'm really looking forward to the biologist chiming in on what genetic differences lead to these perceptual variations.
Me too! It's definitely not a gender differential at least from my tiny pool of office coworkers. I wonder if there something about how you interpret the backlighting and the shading as being whether you're used to more natural light or use tomorrow to finish the light. Regardless, I still just see white and gold. Even though I know I'm wrong!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oh come on PP.I'm a blue-seer, but if you don't think lighting affects color, you have never edited a photo in your life. The dress is objectively blue because there are other photos in other lighting that show it to be blue, not because someone used a color picker function on a badly lit picture in a piece of software.
White / gold seer here, and I get that the actual dress is a fairly dark blue and black, but what I'm curious about is what colors are in THIS picture. I'd love for the blue/black folks to chime in on what they mean by 'blue'. Are we talking a pale blue or the saturated blue of the other pictures?
Regardless I'm really looking forward to the biologist chiming in on what genetic differences lead to these perceptual variations.
Anonymous wrote:My coworkers and I all looked at the photo on the same computer at the same time and some saw blue and black (as did I) and some saw white and gold. We were all sure that we were right.
It depends on how you perceive colors apparently.
In real life the dress really is royal blue with black lace.