• Grool The Demon
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    17 days ago

    I never really understood the debate. In reality, if you were standing in front of the dress it is black and blue. Now, if you take a digital photo of the dress and post it on the internet as a terribly compressed jpg, with weird white balancing, and brightness/contrast turned up and down it is gold and white. The debate isn’t really about the reality of the color of the dress but the reality of a badly edited photo.

    • @[email protected]
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      1817 days ago

      And what everyone seemed to omit: the reality of peoples’ wildly uncalibrated monitors/phone screens.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 days ago

        Properly calibrated screen for graphic design here, multiple mobile devices. Never any major variance unless it’s a different image.

      • @[email protected]
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        617 days ago

        What always confused me is, the picture clearly seems to be overexposed, which means the blue/black interpretation should be obvious.

        • TheRealKuni
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          517 days ago

          I agree. But my wife was so firmly in the white/gold camp that I had to find this (and a better image of the actual dress, which is indeed blue and black) to help us understand one another’s perspective.

        • @[email protected]
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          217 days ago

          It’s because we’re also very used to seeing photographs of a subject in shade while the background is in full sunlight. If you take a picture of a white and gold dress in the shadow of a patio, with the background all fully lit by bright sunlight, the actual pixels representing white objects in the shade would be that bluish gray tint.

          The problem here is that the dress isn’t in the shade but those of us who see white and gold simply assume that it is in shade, while black/blue viewers (correctly) assume that it is under the same lighting conditions of the overexposed background.

          • @[email protected]
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            116 days ago

            This thread has been helpful for understanding how others could see it as white and gold; I never realized people were actually seeing it as in shadow.

    • @[email protected]
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      1017 days ago

      if you take a digital photo of the [ … thing … ] and post it on the internet as a terribly compressed jpg

      That sums up the entirety of the content on a number of popular subs on the R-word site.

      Confusing perspective? No. More like confusing JPEG artifacts.

      • Final Remix
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        217 days ago

        You used to be able to report shit for not being confusing, but it was placebo at best. That site sucks so much.

    • @[email protected]
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      317 days ago

      Is it, though? Is this dress in the pic only white and gold to everyone who looks at the picture/the original?