SD Studios
Well-Known Member
To best-use this thread, we all will have to first agree to some postulates:
1) NO picture, no matter how good it looks, is the "perfect" reference. Flash, fore-shortening, shadows, distortion, etc, all occur and can give you a "false reading".
2) We are all humans. As such, pictures are subject to our interpretation. I have looked at a reference photo many times and missed a tiny detail, whereas someone popped up for the first time and said "Look at this detail". And even having seen the pic a hundred times, I NEVER saw it. Our brains are frail. We look at images with a "bias" going in. Our experience determines how we see things.
3) My eye doctor told me that most males have some level of color-blindness. We just don't know it. (I have taken the test many times and I know). I have a slight red-green deficiency. As an artist all of my life, I have "trained" myself to correct for it. But that is only because I have been fortunate enough to be taught by other professionals how to do it. You are most-likely not seeing color the same as someone else. Take that one in for a moment.
4) Color changes with light. Duck-egg blue is not the same color in direct sunlight as it is in flourescent light, or regular lightbulbs, or tungsten light. Color will change dramatically under different lighting conditions. So never be pragmatic about a color.
I hear you saying: "Sure, Steve, we all know that...duh".
Really? Then why I do constantly read people here discussing colors in a pic in a thread???
"It definitely is redder than Tamiya blah blah blah..."
"That X Wing sure looks white to me!!"
Really?
Colors on your monitor are LIT. They are completely different than under other conditions. THAT is why places like Pixar pay a fortune for calibrated monitors, and bulbs and lighting fixtures.
What settings are on your monitor? Is it digital or analog? Is it calibrated? How was the original picture taken? Was it scanned? What settings wre used? Was the original pic taken with a flash? Or sunlight? Are you partially color-blind? what bulbs are in your room right now?
See my point?
It is pretty-much absurd to argue about colors on the internet.
More later...gotta work.
1) NO picture, no matter how good it looks, is the "perfect" reference. Flash, fore-shortening, shadows, distortion, etc, all occur and can give you a "false reading".
2) We are all humans. As such, pictures are subject to our interpretation. I have looked at a reference photo many times and missed a tiny detail, whereas someone popped up for the first time and said "Look at this detail". And even having seen the pic a hundred times, I NEVER saw it. Our brains are frail. We look at images with a "bias" going in. Our experience determines how we see things.
3) My eye doctor told me that most males have some level of color-blindness. We just don't know it. (I have taken the test many times and I know). I have a slight red-green deficiency. As an artist all of my life, I have "trained" myself to correct for it. But that is only because I have been fortunate enough to be taught by other professionals how to do it. You are most-likely not seeing color the same as someone else. Take that one in for a moment.
4) Color changes with light. Duck-egg blue is not the same color in direct sunlight as it is in flourescent light, or regular lightbulbs, or tungsten light. Color will change dramatically under different lighting conditions. So never be pragmatic about a color.
I hear you saying: "Sure, Steve, we all know that...duh".
Really? Then why I do constantly read people here discussing colors in a pic in a thread???
"It definitely is redder than Tamiya blah blah blah..."
"That X Wing sure looks white to me!!"
Really?
Colors on your monitor are LIT. They are completely different than under other conditions. THAT is why places like Pixar pay a fortune for calibrated monitors, and bulbs and lighting fixtures.
What settings are on your monitor? Is it digital or analog? Is it calibrated? How was the original picture taken? Was it scanned? What settings wre used? Was the original pic taken with a flash? Or sunlight? Are you partially color-blind? what bulbs are in your room right now?
See my point?
It is pretty-much absurd to argue about colors on the internet.
More later...gotta work.