that file format, compression techniques image resolution and colour depth have on file size and image quality. In this report, I will talk about my understanding of the impact in various file format, the different compression techniques, and different resolutions and different colour depth. I will show print screens of different types of compression techniques, megapixels under image quality & resolution and three different types of colour depths. I will explain the reasons why some are larger compared
Brands also prefer opting for colour marks in order to attract more and more people on the bases of their colour preferences or by invoking the implicit meaning of the colour itself . Colour marks, may that be single colours or combination of colours, also appeal to the consumers who do not easily understand traditional trademarks owing to low literacy rate or a different language incomprehensible by the consumer. This furthers the cause of brands to opt for colour marks thereby overcoming language
in English. In the Stroop’s colour-word test (Stroop, 1935), it was demonstrated that people took much longer to name the ink colour of the words printed in incongruent colours, than the words which were colour-unrelated. For instance, it took more time to respond ‘green’ to the word ‘red’ printed in green ink than to respond ‘green’ to the word ‘trust’ written in green ink (Stroop, 1935). For Stroop’s (1935) experiments, he first compared the time of reading colour words printed in black with the
com/serialjournalmanager/pdf/1435299483.pdf Colours and emotions Colours affect different people in different ways. Cimbalo (1978) tested association between colours and emotions, and designated colours like yellow, orange, and blue as happy colours, and red, black and brown as sad colours. These emotions (happy vs sad) were similar across age groups and had the same types of instilled emotions about specific colours. Kotler (1973) indicated that atmospherics such as noises, sizes, shapes, scents and colours could help create
it. The fundamentals of colour were one such mystery. As an unstable property, the secrets of colour have eluded philosophers, artists, and scientists for centuries, until 1666 when Sir Isaac Newton discovered the properties of light. Thanks to visionaries such as Newton, Hermann von Helmholtz, and Georges Seurat modern understanding of colour can be explained in a variety of manners and can now be categorized according to medium. Seperated into ‘light’ and ‘pigment’, colours are viewed as individual
Blue is not just a colour, rather, the colour blue is a way of life. In her essay ‘Bluets’ Maggie Nelson digs with her emotions to capture the colour blue through different perspectives of her experiences. Nelson writes 240 fragments of a collection of images to analyze and reflect on the physical colour of blue, and the feeling she encounters when she writes about her search for inspiration. She does a great job giving readers an insight in her journey finding research with colour blue and its impact
Colour stands for a purpose, for equality, and for emotion. Colour stands as a purpose. Colour makes life bright as well as dark; as well as colour makes life warm as well as cold. Colour is what makes life enjoyable. Imagine the sky without picturing the colour blue or the sunset without a mixture of warm colours; life would be a lot different. Some people would say not as enjoyable. An artist paints pictures with colours, and a crafter sculpts with clay. They need these tools in order for the task
GENETIC DISORDERS: COLOUR BLINDNESS Briefly describe the disorder. Include characteristics, symptoms, age of onset and any relevant ethnic information. Do NOT list every symptom or characteristic. Include only the most relevant and important points. Colour blindness is a disorder where a person has the inability to distinguish between colours, due to missing colour-sensing pigment in the eye’s retina cones. Around 1 in 12 men have this disorder and 1 in 200 women have it. Characteristics of blindness
white has long been the dominant colour for all spaces in hospital, designers have neglected the influence of colour on patience’ psychological and physical conditions. In public spaces such as hospital, reasonable application of colour is closely related to patients’ psychological and physical health. Visual sense is regarded by psychologists as the first feeling of human beings, and colour is the most influential factor of visual sense. Objectively speaking, colour is a kind of stimulation and symbol
written colour names of the words independently of the colour of the ink, for example: they would have to read the word “purple” no matter what the colour of the font. While in the second activity the participants were instructed to name the colours that were different from the colours in which they were displayed, for example: they would