I assed my mom but she sed2 stop been a retard
None of you have been to Thetford Forest then, where black is either red or blue, depending where you come from.
There's Black & there's Super Black! Blacker than Black! Eh?
My mate tried to convince me that Black was made from White, this argument went on for hours, until he then changed his statement to "Black paint is made from White.".. Not being in the Painting industry I didn't have a clue, but I did do Physics so I know Black is not made from White, might be different for paints.
I like the level of technical expertise on display here, but some great philosophers have applied their minds to this question too. 🙂
bol - Member
None of you have been to Thetford Forest then, where black is either red or blue, depending where you come from.
😛
Live in Thetford, the answer was there in front of me all along.
As a sort of aside, when I was doing a college day-release there was a student who did architectural type drawings using only black ink, but she used loads of different felttips and fountain pens, then she'd use a water wash over the top, so the ink would bleed out lots of different shades of blue, green, red, purple etc. Very effective, but required lots of research to work out what make of pen ran what colour. So there ya go, black is all sorts of colours.
so, after 51 posts by 32 stw experts i conclude that black is not black but is in fact a grey area 😆
Yep. It's down there in black and white...
...oh, is that my coat? Thank you, most kind.
Say it loud!
I'm many shades of very dark grey with an inner rainbow and I'm proud!
So if black is black because it soaks up all the colours, is that why shite Ka bumpers go grey? Are they full?
^^^LOL
Black is the absence of reflected light
Right, so what's gloss black? Shiny, cos it reflects, but it still looks black. How's that work?
(I could give an answer but it'd spoil the imact of the question, and I want to see if any of you lot can figure it out)
Because the surface is reflecting the light entirely.
Then it'd be white...
My ability to describe the phenomenon escapes me but your argument would mean that a mirror would be white too.
I know in my head what is happening but cannot explain it so please do so for me (us).
🙂
Damn, someone beat me with the spinal tap quote.
With reference to the gloss black question...............I reckon it might be that the object is black because it aborbs all natural daylight (from the sun....just in case) which is made up of the colours in the spectrum.
The gloss effect comes from having a material finish that reflects un-natural ambient light from bulbs etc which do not have a short enough wavelength (i.e high enough energy) to penetrate the objects surface and so reflect back.
I don't really think that those at Cern need worry about the STW colony taking there jobs any time soon! 😉
I like Pink.
It's better than Black anyday.
Personally I prefer the shade that's a sort of flourescent purpleish green.
