• Jakylla@jlai.lu
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    3 months ago

    Your boundary is at hue 175, bluer than 65% of the population. For you, turquoise is green.

    Actually hard, because I use to distinguish Cyan from Green and Blue, so categorizing it to either blue or green was a bit difficult

      • Jakylla@jlai.lu
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        3 months ago

        Yup, maybe because of computer graphics; I tend to consider Cyan, Turquoise and Teal as some kind of synonyms (or really similar to eachother); ususally I call it when there is almost as much green as blue “Cyan”

        When looking at definitions, there are not the same colors, but are still all different shades of Green and Blue (I don’t personnaly recognize them well, so I consider them with the same name; like people call them Green or Blue here)

        My rainbow wheel be like: Red - Orange - Yellow - Green - Cyan - Blue - Purple - Magenta - Red

        Like for the pixels on your screen are RGB = Red, Green & Blue; and the paint in Inkjet printers are CYMK (Cyan, Yellow, Magenta, blacK)

        • Overshoot2648@lemm.ee
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          3 months ago

          If you start out with the primaries and keep mixing to get the hues between you’ll end up with 6, then 12, and then 24 hues at the quaternary level. Orange is a tertiary color with it’s opposite being Azure.

          • Jakylla@jlai.lu
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            3 months ago

            According to your website, teal would be a darker shade of Cyan

            Teal, #008080: https://www.canva.com/colors/color-meanings/teal/

            And by what I read #30D5C8, so Turquoise is a nuance near to Cyan, but grayer/desaturated (there is a bit of red), and a bit more towards green than blue (D5 > C8)

            Cyan/Teal (darker cyan) are the true middle between Green & Blue, with exactly as much green as blue in it

            • GrayBackgroundMusic@lemm.ee
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              3 months ago

              According to your website, teal would be a darker shade of Cyan

              Hmm… By just the numeric hex code, I agree, that makes sense. Just lowering the G and B values makes it darker. However, lowering BOTH G and B lowers B twice, since G can be broken into Y and B by color theory, so blue is removed proportionately more. So, somewhat disagree.

              I still don’t think Teal and Cyan are the same. I’d say Teal and Turquoise are closer, in my eyes. I think Teal is darker Turquoise moreso than it’s darker Cyan.

              But at the end, color is all subjective.

              • Jakylla@jlai.lu
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                3 months ago

                Yeah, exactly that kind of nuancing problem, that make me tell Cyan/Turquoise/Teal as “the same color” in everyday use (and for my fellows French people, that do not use to use Turquoise or Cyan words in everyday life, I use to say “Blue-Green”; but I don’t like to call these nuances either “Blue” or “Green”, as nobody never agrees depending on the nuance, and that makes awkward situations)

          • Overshoot2648@lemm.ee
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            3 months ago

            The issue with the term light blue is that people think of light as being warmer and green tends to have a higher chromatic luminance. A true “light blue” would actually be periwinkle as it’s the tint of primary blue.