MobiColour RESULT: MC #133 Theme: Two Colors - August 13-19, 2018

RoseCat

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Catherine
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color
[kuhl-er]

noun
1. the quality of an object or substance with respect to light reflected by the object, usually determined visually by measurement of hue, saturation, and brightness of the reflected light; saturation or chroma; hue.

adjective

1. involving, utilizing, yielding, or possessing color: a color TV.
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Welcome to MobiTog's color Challenge #133!
The rules are easy: Post your mobile photography color images here - LIMIT OF 3 IMAGES IN ONE POST, preferably 1 image per post. No black & white, no shades of grey, just BOLD BRIGHT COLORS! Or, SOFT PASTEL COLORS. Whatever strikes your fancy, or your color palette. :D

The challenge will last one week, and then the winner of the prior challenge will choose the winner of the current challenge, who will then decide
if there will be a theme to the next challenge or not, and what that theme will be. :sneaky:

Please see the Rules and Guidelines for MobiChallenges posted HERE.
Check out our previous winners in the Gallery HERE.

Let's electrify this space with
C O L O R !!

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Theme: Two Colours.
Take photos that have only 2 colours in them. Any colours, your choice. Don't worry too much if there's a little of other colours in there, just as long as the majority of the picture contains a majority of just 2 colours.

The judge for this challenge is rizole Rizole!
 
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This weeks theme is: Two Colours.
Take photos that have only 2 colours in them. Any colours, your choice. Don't worry too much if there's a little of other colours in there, just as long as the majority of the picture contains a majority of just 2 colours. :)
 
A4ED94DA-19B2-415C-9217-A51D6BC58E58.jpeg


Purple and green
ACDSee Pro
 
The absence of colour.
Tricky.
Reading around, it's an achromatic colour. Achromatic can mean colourless but it can also mean without hue or saturation. It's further complicated by weather you are talking about light or pigments. Where you come at it from will give you a different view so arguments either way clearly depend on your presuppositions.

That it is taken as a colour by many is not in doubt:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shades_of_black#Black
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_colors:_A–F

Anecdotally, with old cathode ray tube monitors back in the day, it took more power/electricity to accurately display the colour black than any other colour. Not sure what that proves but I always thought it was interesting.

Lastly... maybe I should just declare my picture out of the competition....:whistle: :lol:
 
Tricky.
Reading around, it's an achromatic colour. Achromatic can mean colourless but it can also mean without hue or saturation. It's further complicated by weather you are talking about light or pigments. Where you come at it from will give you a different view so arguments either way clearly depend on your presuppositions.

That it is taken as a colour by many is not in doubt:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shades_of_black#Black
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_colors:_A–F

Anecdotally, with old cathode ray tube monitors back in the day, it took more power/electricity to accurately display the colour black than any other colour. Not sure what that proves but I always thought it was interesting.

Lastly... maybe I should just declare my picture out of the competition....:whistle: :lol:
Erm......as you are judge that goes without saying, unless you declare your own picture the best :lol:
Or is there nothing in the rules that says you can't do that :eek:

Its one of the age old debates, white as well as black. I just picked on your image as it was green and black........and I KNEW you wouldn't take offence ;)
I my eyes there is only one 'colour' in that image.
 
Tricky.
Reading around, it's an achromatic colour. Achromatic can mean colourless but it can also mean without hue or saturation. It's further complicated by weather you are talking about light or pigments. Where you come at it from will give you a different view so arguments either way clearly depend on your presuppositions.

That it is taken as a colour by many is not in doubt:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shades_of_black#Black
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_colors:_A–F

Anecdotally, with old cathode ray tube monitors back in the day, it took more power/electricity to accurately display the colour black than any other colour. Not sure what that proves but I always thought it was interesting.

Lastly... maybe I should just declare my picture out of the competition....:whistle: :lol:

Erm......as you are judge that goes without saying, unless you declare your own picture the best :lol:
Or is there nothing in the rules that says you can't do that :eek:

Its one of the age old debates, white as well as black. I just picked on your image as it was green and black........and I KNEW you wouldn't take offence ;)
I my eyes there is only one 'colour' in that image.

Pah! Physicist! :mad:

:lmao:
 
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