on 28-02-2015 09:15 AM
on 28-02-2015 10:25 AM
on 28-02-2015 10:30 AM
on 28-02-2015 10:30 AM
Yes isn't it interesting that people see it in such a hugely different colour range?
not just in different shade but in totally unrelated colours.
on 28-02-2015 10:35 AM
on 28-02-2015 10:37 AM
can you imagine listing it on ebay?
28-02-2015 04:54 PM - edited 28-02-2015 04:55 PM
on 28-02-2015 04:58 PM
It looks white and gold to me. Sort of a muddy gold.
on 28-02-2015 05:02 PM
To no one in particular.
Is that the relevance to "seeing" colours? Our mood, or blood pressure, or......?
Before yoga, and after yoga for example?
DEB
on 28-02-2015 05:02 PM
good question!
McNeill plays guitar and sings in a band named Canach that plays what she described as “traditional Scottish folky music.” Her band played at the wedding. She actually saw the dress and told us definitively what colour it really is.
“I got to the wedding and the mother was wearing the dress,” McNeill said. “Obviously it was blue and black.”
http://www.businessinsider.com.au/origin-of-white-gold-or-black-blue-dress-2015-2
on 28-02-2015 05:04 PM
My youngest and I could only see white and gold, yet daughter phones up and states that it is clearly blue and black. Check with Dad...(he says blue and black too). We were thinking it was right brain left brain stuff.
Found this article
http://www.wired.com/2015/02/science-one-agrees-color-dress/
Today I can see the blue and black lol, but not last night.