Posted August 22, 201312 yr In reference to solid colors, white represents the absence. In the topic of colors of light, white is the presence of all colors. And that concludes the color lesson of the day! inb4 Cool story bro, tell it again!
August 22, 201312 yr I wish I owned a white dress. White dresses are very pretty (even IF they can get spoiled kinda easily...:< but, my dolly has white hair and he isn't spoiled yet soo maybe there is a light of hope X3;; yep yep)
August 22, 201312 yr I've always learnt of white just representing all colours and black being the absence of colour, then again I was a science student.
August 22, 201312 yr But when you really think about it, if you add every color in existence together, you most likely end up with black, because every color is darker than white. But white isn't absence of color either, since it is created with every color in the light spectrum. So, in reality there is nothing that we can see that represents the absence of color. All color is is different forms of light bouncing back at your retina, which is translated to appear that things possess color. If you've ever been in a dark cave with absolutely no light, that is when there is truly no color. So black is the closest thing to the absence of color, which is basically the absence of light. oh wait this is the random section woops
August 22, 201312 yr In reference to solid colors, white represents the absence. In the topic of colors of light, white is the presence of all colors. And that concludes the color lesson of the day! inb4 Cool story bro, tell it again! Actually, white is the composition of all fragments on the light wave spectrum. Black, however, is the lacking therefor of most of the light in any spectrum of the light wave scale. Light makes up all colors, and darkness is the absence of all of them.
August 22, 201312 yr But when you really think about it, if you add every color in existence together, you most likely end up with black, because every color is darker than white. But white isn't absence of color either, since it is created with every color in the light spectrum. So, in reality there is nothing that we can see that represents the absence of color. All color is is different forms of light bouncing back at your retina, which is translated to appear that things possess color. If you've ever been in a dark cave with absolutely no light, that is when there is truly no color. So black is the closest thing to the absence of color, which is basically the absence of light. oh wait this is the random section woops Actually, adding in every color would result in an odd mush similar to brown/grey, or if you mix the primary colors(Red blue and yellow) you get, again an odd brownish mix. Fusing all colors together will result in neither black or white.
August 22, 201312 yr Actually, adding in every color would result in an odd mush similar to brown/grey, or if you mix the primary colors(Red blue and yellow) you get, again an odd brownish mix. Fusing all colors together will result in neither black or white. Thanks for actually taking time to read that, I was seeing if anybody actually paid attention to that mistake!
August 22, 201312 yr Thanks for actually taking time to read that, I was seeing if anybody actually paid attention to that mistake! It was hard for me to not, being that it was quite blatant, no offense.
August 22, 201312 yr Author I've always learnt of white just representing all colours and black being the absence of colour, then again I was a science student. But when you really think about it, if you add every color in existence together, you most likely end up with black, because every color is darker than white. But white isn't absence of color either, since it is created with every color in the light spectrum. So, in reality there is nothing that we can see that represents the absence of color. All color is is different forms of light bouncing back at your retina, which is translated to appear that things possess color. If you've ever been in a dark cave with absolutely no light, that is when there is truly no color. So black is the closest thing to the absence of color, which is basically the absence of light. oh wait this is the random section woops I thought that what I said... o-o In terms of solid colors it's the absence, in terms of light it's all.
August 22, 201312 yr I thought that what I said... o-o In terms of solid colors it's the absence, in terms of light it's all. That is what you said, I was just saying that I only learnt of white light since I'm a science student and not an art student.
In reference to solid colors, white represents the absence. In the topic of colors of light, white is the presence of all colors.
And that concludes the color lesson of the day!
inb4 Cool story bro, tell it again!