So basically I think that if I ever turn blue due to lack of oxygenation I'm going to make sure that on the autopsy, it is stated that I turned "dark white".
Thank you Monte for this brilliant addition to my lexicon.
It's all because of the shadowing on the dress. The original is blue and black. It appears as both white and gold and black and blue because of the way the image was taken. It's just the way your eyes adjust to the picture.
This is inaccurate. You are not taking into account some factors like lighting and shade. The white dress is in the shade and the sunlight behind it appears brighter. That's why it doesn't appear paper white.
If I took a sample of you avi - Taylor's skin from photoshop, I would get orange. Is Taylor's skin orange?
We already have images of the dress in a "naturalistic" lighting-- it's royal blue and black. You said that we're talking about directly in the photo, not in reality, so I sampled the colors from that. What more do you want?
In real life, the dress is royal blue with black lacing. In the photo, the dress is that coloring, but exposure & lighting causes it to be a periwinkle blue with apparently gold accents due to the exposure, even though the colors are blue & black.
We already have images of the dress in a "naturalistic" lighting-- it's royal blue and black. You said that we're talking about directly in the photo, not in reality, so I sampled the colors from that. What more do you want?
In real life, the dress is royal blue with black lacing. In the photo, the dress is that coloring, but exposure & lighting causes it to be a periwinkle blue with apparently gold accents due to the exposure, even though the colors are blue & black.
Even if in reality the dress is black and blue, it's not in the photo. This may be due to whatever factors or tricks, but the dress is white and gold in the photo.
The dress is black and blue. The photos are white and gold (even the edited ones). Yet I don't get how people see blue in the photos when it's not in it, only in the original dress