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Re: [OM] OT: Test your colour vision here

Subject: Re: [OM] OT: Test your colour vision here
From: "Jim Nichols" <jhnichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008 21:09:45 -0600
Marc,

Don't feel bad.  I got a 59.  My errors were well distributed.  My wife has 
always contended that my sons and I were color-blind, though I passed the 
FAA color-blind test for my flight physical many times.

Jim Nichols
Tullahoma, TN USA
----- Original Message ----- 
From: <montsnmags@xxxxxxxxx>
To: "Olympus Camera Discussion" <olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2008 7:24 PM
Subject: Re: [OM] OT: Test your colour vision here


> Ken Norton wrote:
>> I got a seven on my work computer.  However, I had to keep moving the 
>> window
>> back and forth between my two highly-uncalibrated monitors.  My only
>> screwups were on the bottom scale.
>
> Over a period of time, I've done this on four different (uncalibrated)
> monitors, in Ubuntu, XP, OS X, and across my little Fujitsu P7120
> laptop, the iMac, the HP LCD monitor, a Dell LCD monitor, and an old
> Compaq CRT, I always range around the 40-60 area, this time, 43, on the
> laptop. (I'm not sure if the above variables have any relevance. I just
> include them for reference).
>
> My areas of fault are mostly in the blue-green to blue area, with bumps
> in the reds, and down in the orange-yellows.
>
> I'm not sure if this is down to calibration, or simply that I am one of
> the not insignificant percentage of males with partial colour-blindness.
> I often wonder at this when people start talking in strong critical
> manner about lens colour, white balance and skin-tones, as, while I can
> often tell the differences, I find that also quite often it doesn't seem
> to mean much to me even then (and certainly it doesn't when I can't).
> Large differences...yes, I can see and make changes accordingly then. I
> wonder, however, whether the subtleties are completely lost on me.
>
> I think this is what leads me to greater comfort with black-and-white.
> Much like when I use a good, prime lens, and *know* it's at least sharp,
> I think I am biased towards black and white in my own photography
> because I then know that faults in the result are my own (whereas
> potential colour-blindness-related faults may be something I simply am
> unable to detect).
>
> Basically, I don't have certainty with colour, and I'm rather fond of
> certainty. :)
>
> Cheers,
> Marc
> Noosa Heads, Oz
> http://www.parknmeter.com/gallery
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