08 July 2020 @ 02:31 am
Sunshine Challenge 2020 - Prompt 2 (Orange)  


Orange is one of my favourite colours, along with brown, which is derived from it. I think rust/copper/tawny shades are probably my absolute favourite. In fact, when I bought a little rust-coloured velvet cushion once, and my mother said, "But you've got cushions," I just pulled it out and she said, "Oh, of course you bought it: it's Greer-coloured."


We all learn young that RED + YELLOW = ORANGE. In the limited palette of a child's paint box, we also find that this is true in practice as well as theory. It ain't always true! I mean, try mixing red and blue to make purple: given the shades available to most kids, all you ever get is purplish mud.


It has always puzzled me, though, why so many colour charts and rainbow sequences (say on flags or in ads) show as "orange" a colour that is very much closer to red than yellow. Often, it's almost red! You'd think they'd pick a shade that is bang in the middle.

Instead, all too often, it looks more like this:





Now, obviously if you compare the middle colour to red, it looks "un-red":





But, if you put it side by side with the yellow without red for contrast, then it actually looks more like a light red. Certainly, it's far redder than anything I'd call a true orange.





Surely, what you want to use for "orange" is a shade that contrasts equally either way. You want something that is clearly different when compared with red:





And also clearly different when compared with yellow:





So why do people so often use a very dark orange in making rainbows and colour wheels and the like?

Isn't this how it should be?



 
 
( Post a new comment )
Silver Adept[personal profile] silveradept on July 10th, 2020 05:26 am (UTC)
I wonder why those oranges are more red. It sounds like an issue with dyes or lights or someone stepping through the hex codes and not recognizing that this particular jump doesn't actually land on a recognizable orange.
greerwatson[personal profile] greerwatson on July 10th, 2020 07:12 pm (UTC)
Well, [personal profile] oldtoadwoman (see thread just above you) seems to think it has to do with ink jet printers; and it sounds plausible. Especially if there's any chance of residue of the other inks getting mixed in; but I can't say on that matter since I don't use a colour printer myself, having an ancient but very efficient and hard-working B&W laser printer.

As for hex codes, if you limit yourself to "safe" colours, #FF6600 is a bit dark and #FF9900 a bit light, at least to my eyes, though both are definitely orange.
Silver Adept[personal profile] silveradept on July 11th, 2020 02:20 am (UTC)
That's certainly a possibility of why the orange isn't working. I'm used to CYMK being a bit more able to do things than an RGB tri-color cartridge.

I do want to know what kind of printers can have their colors swapped at will and be reconfigured.