I’ll ask around. Thank you
Thank you for responding. Something interesting and worth investigating
Trynforpar wrote:
Thank you for responding. Something interesting and worth investigating
If you use Quote Reply we will know who you are responding to.
I actually purchased Sun glasses that are designed for color blindness. They certainly boost certain colors outdoors but they don’t teach you what the colors or shades of colors are so not what I was looking for. Thanks for responding
Thank you John. I will check that out
Thank you for responding John. That’s an interesting idea.
Trynforpar wrote:
Thank you for responding John. That’s an interesting idea.
When you are responding to a post, click Quote Reply instead of just Reply. Then the post you are replying to will be shown like it did for this post.
It is a great question, because there are lots of folks who have some degree of color deficiency.
Precisely because there are so many different color deficiencies , and different amounts of those deficiencies, I would start with a very precise diagnosis of exactly where and in what degree your particular vision differs from what is considered normal color vision.
Once you know that, you can better compensate for YOUR vision.
I'm fascinated by the comment about Bruce Fraser using "offsets" Bruce was part of the "Pixel Genius Group" who 'wrote the book" on best practices in the early days of Digital.
Sincere Good Luck
clint f.
Loc: Priest Lake Idaho, Spokane Wa
W9OD wrote:
I am a retired optometrist. You could try anaglyph glasses with the green lens removed. Use just the filtered red lens over one eye. That worked for a patient who did a horrible job adjusting filtering for film processing. I fit him with a red contact lens, solved the problem. Actually, he used the lens for a couple of weeks and was able to make the filtering normal by remembering how much change there was from previous tries.
Red contacts conjures up some scary images in my head😎
Thank you for responding. Great information
Thanks. I’ll look into that
Thanks. That’s an interesting idea
It’s interesting that we both have the same type of colorblindness and I also found out in the military. I actually completed my first 3 courses in jet engine repair and was about to take the practical exams. During my physical the captain called me into his office and had me take a colorblind test. I was 18 years old and had no idea what colorblindness was but I failed miserably. The captain then looked at me wondered how in the world I ended up in the top 10% of my class. I can match colors very well but I can’t tell you what they are. They since changed the criteria for acceptance into jet engine repair school.
Trynforpar wrote:
Thanks. That’s an interesting idea
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