I like pure red light (#FF0000) because its relaxing and lessens visual information overload

Baker-Miller pink is also interesting, was proposed to reduce violence and promote calmness in prison. Also very relaxing

  • @leftzero
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    194 months ago

    Cherenkov Blue.

    Because it’s metal as fuck, that’s why. Electromagnetic equivalent of a sonic boom.

    Also, it’s pretty:

    Blue!

  • @[email protected]
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    174 months ago

    #FF00FF

    In terms of physiology, the color is stimulated in the brain when the eye reports input from short wave blue cone cells along with a sub-sensitivity of the long wave cones which respond secondarily to that same deep blue color, but with little or no input from the middle wave cones. The brain interprets that combination as some hue of magenta or purple, depending on the relative strengths of the cone responses.

    In other words, our brains are like “🤷‍♂️, here’s a thing”

  • 🐋 Color 🍁 ♀
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    144 months ago

    490-510 nanometers, I love cyans and greens. Teal and turquoise are very relaxing colors to me 😃

  • Boozilla
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    114 months ago

    I’m a fan of synthwave. AKA Outrun. Colors from that pallette on a black background are my jam. If I have to pick one, I’d go with neon purple.

  • @[email protected]
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    84 months ago

    Ultraviolet. It makes other colors that much more cool just by being there. And it kills things.

  • @[email protected]
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    64 months ago

    What I call Parrish light - the distinctive tone that’s prominent in Maxfield Parrish’s paintings.

    It’s a relatively subdued but clear reddish orange that I see most commonly with relatively uniform but thin thunderclouds at dusk. It makes blues and greens much more vivid, in spite of the fact that the overall amount of light is relatively low. And it’s glorious.

      • @[email protected]
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        44 months ago

        Pretty much.

        Don’t get too hung up on the name - it’s just a personal bit of shorthand. What I’m talking about is the actual phenomenon. Parrish’s paintings are just the closest popular representation I’ve seen of it.

        It seems to happen most often in late summer, when (in my area at least) afternoon thundershowers are relatively common. There are times when the clouds will roll in, but they’re not dense enough to bring rain, and just at dusk, the light through those clouds is diffused but oddly clear, so in spite of the fact that the light level is low overall, colors, and especially blues and greens, really pop.

        In HSL terms, it’s essentially 100% saturation but only maybe 30% light, and since the light shifts toward red/orange, the blues and greens are the colors that stand out the most.

        • @[email protected]
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          4 months ago

          In HSL terms, it’s essentially 100% saturation but only maybe 30% light, and since the light shifts toward red/orange, the blues and greens are the colors that stand out the most.

          A little physics of light correction: The colors that red and orange light cause to pop are red and orange. Red/orange light does cast a blue/green shadow color, though. The compliment of a light’s color is always the ambient color temperature of the light source’s shadow. That may be what you mean because a Red/Orange light will always make Reds and Oranges more intense than other colors since that is where most light energy is accumulated. For example, if I put a Red gel over a light then cast that light upon a solid blue surface, significantly less light would be bouncing off that surface than if I had used a Red surface.

          https://www.muddycolors.com/2022/07/color-theory-part-9-the-anatomy-of-shadows/

          • @[email protected]
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            14 months ago

            Hmm…

            I would assume then that the effect is somehow tied in with the fact that the light is diffused and relatively dim, since it’s simply a fact that the blues and greens are the colors that pop. Possibly there isn’t enough light to show up orange or red - effectively, everything is sort of in shadow?

            And by contrast, as I write this, it’s very smoky where I am, and yes - the light is notably orange. And I’ve noticed before that when it’s like this, shadows have an obvious blue tint.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 months ago

      Favorite all-time painter!

      “Raphael, imma let you finnish, but Maxfield Parrish was the one of the best painters of all time. Of all time!”

  • @[email protected]
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    44 months ago

    I like a yellowish/golden color I set the led bulbs in my lamps to that make it feel like an old library or bookstore.

  • Xan Surnamehere
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    24 months ago

    As I wrote this, I didn’t read that it was about light… #fca4a4 sweet pink, kinda like salmon but more red on the Hue slider. I use it as my brand color! Even though I don’t really use it much.