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No indigo

No indigo
To my eyes every colour of the rainbow is represented here, except indigo. I believe, as I mentioned to Robert Cabaret under the day before yesterday's photograph, that not only do different languages see different colours, but so do different individuals who speak the same language. For example, I don't think indigo is a distinctive colour at all, and people seem to have different ideas about what's red and what's orange (and what's pink, which doesn't make it into the rainbow at all). So I'm interested in hearing what you think.

Thanks to Robert for inspiring this, and thanks to all commenters.

=====

And now I've decided that's pink, not red. So my colour perception has changed since this morning.

E. Adam G., Sami Serola (inactive), Berny, Dutt Changgle and 18 other people have particularly liked this photo


17 comments - The latest ones
 Andy Rodker
Andy Rodker club
Excellent!
5 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Andy Rodker club
Thanks, Andy.
5 years ago.
 J. Gafarot
J. Gafarot club
Yes, I have some sort of that problem too.
For me Indigo is a sort of dark blue, almost night blue that I do not see in this picture.
5 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to J. Gafarot club
And that's the indigo used by Indigo bookstores here, José. So you have Canadian support.
5 years ago. Edited 5 years ago.
 Diane Putnam
Diane Putnam club
Indigo, hard-core African version: tinyurl.com/yyt57c8b Glorious! Indigo dye is a fermented product of the indigo plant and in its full strength is an iridescent nearly-black. That is its distinctive color to the Tuareg in the Sahara desert, but as it fades with washing and sunlight, it gradually lightens to what we would see as pale, old denim. The Japanese also use indigo dyes and have made beautiful garments with the cloth. tinyurl.com/y2zvyxqr

OK, tutorial finished. ;-b
5 years ago. Edited 5 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Diane Putnam club
To me, though, that's purple, Diane.
5 years ago.
Diane Putnam club has replied to John FitzGerald club
Yes, the Tuareg indigo looks purple-blue-black to me, too.
5 years ago.
 Annemarie
Annemarie club
wonderful!
have a great day:)
5 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Annemarie club
Thanks, Annemarie, and the same to you.
5 years ago.
 William Sutherland
William Sutherland club
Fabulous capture!

Admired in:
www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
5 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to William Sutherland club
Thanks, William.
5 years ago.
 Keith Burton
Keith Burton club
This is all a bit deep for me................I just really like the colours..!! Nice one John.

I found this description of indigo on the web if it helps: "The color indigo is the color of intuition and perception and is helpful in opening the third eye."

Obvious innit?
5 years ago. Edited 5 years ago.
 John FitzGerald
John FitzGerald club
Maybe I should be using an indigo filter, Keith. It would have been useful today, which my third eye has been asleep all the way through.
5 years ago.
 tiabunna
tiabunna club
Hmm, I'd always thought of indigo as a very dark blue. Anyway, when I looked it up I found: "Indigo is a deep midnight blue. It is a combination of deep blue and violet and holds the attributes of both these colors. ... Powerful and dignified, indigo conveys integrity and deep sincerity. ". Who'd'a thought! :-)
5 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to tiabunna club
So in the end it's all arbitrary. I wonder how dependent these definitions are on the marketing preferences of textile and dye companies.
5 years ago.
 Sarah P.
Sarah P.
It's all in the sound. "Indigo" sounds romantic. (!ndigo, on the other hand, is plain ridiculous.)
The blue in the picture above is often called "periwinkle" (in the clothing trade.) And yes, that's pink (to me) not red.
I like the whole assortment (of scarves???) here, especially the mingling of light blue/green, the former you could call turquoise (though it's a little too blue for that) and the latter "seafoam." How's that for poetry?
5 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Sarah P.
I'm not sure exactly what these are, Sarah. Maybe table umbrellas. Too big and canvassy to be scarves, anyway. The tropically-themed one may be an interloper, too. To my untutored mind you'd expect seafoam to be white. I discovered that periwinkle is also called lavender blue -- people can't even make up their minds about what plant it resembles.
5 years ago.

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