A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.
I don't even see the colours anymore
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"The Green Goblin appe-" "Hold up." "What?" "Why does the goblin's skin color matter?"
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I see they know how to throw them as well
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"The Green Goblin appe-" "Hold up." "What?" "Why does the goblin's skin color matter?"
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US Light grey is darker than US grey?
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US Light grey is darker than US grey?
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True, but I've also seen pictures of another paint called "drow nipple pink," and that's pretty weird too, imo.
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Commercial print artists use Pantone, or some other color standard--way too many colors for names. And, names are far too inaccurate, outside of clearly defined ones in the CMYK space, such as red being 100M, 100Y, etc. Just do an image search for any color name, any one at all, and see the range of what people think, for instance, orange is. Turquoise is another one, because natural turquoise appears in many different hues. Paint artists use color names, I suppose. I don't know, I don't paint. But 'burnt umber' was fused into my brain by Bob Ross. Digital artists are stuck with RGB, HEX, or whatever, and at the whims of whichever monitor their work ends up on.
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Commercial print artists use Pantone, or some other color standard--way too many colors for names. And, names are far too inaccurate, outside of clearly defined ones in the CMYK space, such as red being 100M, 100Y, etc. Just do an image search for any color name, any one at all, and see the range of what people think, for instance, orange is. Turquoise is another one, because natural turquoise appears in many different hues. Paint artists use color names, I suppose. I don't know, I don't paint. But 'burnt umber' was fused into my brain by Bob Ross. Digital artists are stuck with RGB, HEX, or whatever, and at the whims of whichever monitor their work ends up on.
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"The Green Goblin appe-" "Hold up." "What?" "Why does the goblin's skin color matter?"As a kid, I learned the word "verdant" by reading a Spider-Man novel in which Peter realized an organization was nefarious by recognizing the root "verde" in the name. I think that, in the story, the organization was trying to reproduce The Hulk. Hence, green.