Is black and blue together still a fashion faux pas?
If you like brain/eye tricks like this you should check out brain games on Netflix.
It still is except if you were Saint-Laurent, and your blue was actually navy blue.
Is black and blue together still a fashion faux pas?
If you like brain/eye tricks like this you should check out brain games on Netflix.
Is black and blue together still a fashion faux pas?
If you like brain/eye tricks like this you should check out brain games on Netflix.
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lol nothing matters
I see white and gold, my wife sees blue and black and both my kids (6, 4), both asked seperatley say they see blue and gold.
what is this sorcery?!
Man.... I get that the black is super distorted and reads more as bronze for people, but I'm never going to understand anyone who sees white in that image.
I find this kind of stuff fascinating and I'm having a riot asking what my friends and relatives think, but good god some people are being hostile about this thing.
Did this whole thing start here?
Black and blue BTW.
There have been so many mindblowing optical illusions posted on the web from the very beginning.. I couldn't believe how this relatively mundane one blew up today. Everyone I followed on twitter, stars and people from all the continents with nothing in common, posted this.. and the discussion just went on and on. Who's responsible.
I know what I saw.The lesson here should be that your eyes are imperfect squishy little devices which malfunction all the time.
People who say "seeing is believing?" No. This is where UFOs and Big Foot come from: people who honestly, genuinely believe they saw something, when the reality is their eyes are evil, naughty liars. And yours are, too.
People seeing (tinted blue) white and gold are seeing the picture at face value without any interpretation.
This one feels different because it's not a manufactured optical illusion. It's just a picture that people are seeing significantly different colors in.
The people seeing (dark) blue and black are the ones experiencing the optical illusion. Your brain knows that's what it is despite evidence from color pickers, so that's what you see.
People seeing (tinted blue) white and gold are seeing the picture at face value without any interpretation.
I bet your monitors are all super blue-tinted, making you see white.
The people seeing (dark) blue and black are the ones experiencing the optical illusion. Your brain knows that's what it is despite evidence from color pickers, so that's what you see.
People seeing (tinted blue) white and gold are seeing the picture at face value without any interpretation.
I find this kind of stuff fascinating and I'm having a riot asking what my friends and relatives think, but good god some people are being hostile about this thing.
Man.... I get that the black is super distorted and reads more as bronze for people, but I'm never going to understand anyone who sees white in that image.
Same here but blue and black.No matter what I do it's still white and gold. :/
I'm pretty sure the white/gold people shouldn't be driving at night.
There are so many factors at play here. As a photographer, let me dive in:
1) Colour temperature of photo - When you take a picture, cameras will change the colour temperature to automatically try to make things look the right colour based on the lighting source (for consumer cameras anyway, SLRs will let you choose manually). If you take a picture under a tungsten light and then daylight, white will look gold in the former and blue in the latter. A professional would colour-correct in lightroom or photoshop, but a cell phone would not.
2) Colour temperature of monitor - Your monitor can also change the colour of things posted. My work monitor makes the image look more white and gold, but with a blue-ish colour temp. But my home monitor (calibrated for image retouching, etc, and with a full colour gamut) shows a much richer blue and a deep brown, as if it's a blue and black that have been overexposed...which leads to -
3) Exposure - I can make a white horse look black and a black horse look white based on exposure. Exposure is basically how much light is allowed to hit the sensor. So if you over-expose an image, then things become washed out and lighter, as is happening in this image. You can tell the image is over-exposed because the sunlight in the background is blown out rather than being balanced. The dress should be much darker, basically.
So, having said these 3 things, the likeliest explanation is that this is a blue and black dress (more likely a really dark grey than black) that has been over-exposed along with colour-corrected to the warm end. So the blue begins to look white, and the dark grey/black begins to look brown/gold.
This dress appears to come in 2 styles: blue and black, and white and black. It has to be the former, as if it was white and black then the black would look bluer, not yellower. This is because if you colour correct the temperature to the cooler side (white turns to blue) then the black would also turn more blue. To make the black/dark grey brown/gold you'd also have to make the white look very yellow.
So this dress must (by the rules of images and light) be a blue with a dark grey/black lace.
This is all assuming someone hasn't manipulated anything.
okay, this is really fucked up
Yesterday, it was White n Gold for me
Today, it is Black n Blue
like WTF is wrong with me?
is it because I have looked at it at different times of day or on different monitors?
when I go home, I will have to re-check
now, during daylight sitting next to a natural lit window, it is Black n Blue
I will go home tonight, at night using room lighting to see if it turns back to White n Gold
Only those who have seen it change from white/gold to blue/black can really fathom how different it is and how screwed up the perception of the image was.
Those still on one side and never saw the switch are missing out.
It's white and gold.
The issue is mixed light sources.
The outside of the store is in the sun, the inside is in the shade. Sunlight color temperature is 5200, shade is 9000 (bluer).
So you have to choose. You can adjust the white balance for the sun and the outside will be correct but the inside will look bluish.
okay, this is really fucked up
Yesterday, it was White n Gold for me
Today, it is Black n Blue
like WTF is wrong with me?
is it because I have looked at it at different times of day or on different monitors?
when I go home, I will have to re-check
now, during daylight sitting next to a natural lit window, it is Black n Blue
I will go home tonight, at night using room lighting to see if it turns back to White n Gold
This is exactly what is happening in the dress image. The original is adjusted for the sun white balance which makes the dress in the shade look blueish. When the white balance is corrected for the shade the dress in the shade looks correctly as white and gold (just like the shirt in the shade looked correctly colorless), while the outside becomes incorrectly yellowish.
Where did this start out? It made CNN.