How Humans See Colour
Posted: Sun 14 Dec 2014, 08:33
There is an interesting article on LuLa which goes into the science of human colour vision.
http://www.luminous-landscape.com/essay ... lies.shtml
The bottom line is that around 10% of the human population experience colour in a way which deviates from the majority. Based on my own experience when I talk about colour vision in my presentation on composition, camera club members tend to be a self selecting group. Around 8% of the male population has the most common form of colour blindness, the inability to distinguish between red and green. Yet it is very unusual to find people at clubs who are colour blind and the overall percentage is far lower than average.
The article does address the importance for designers to take vision defects into account and claims that this should also apply to photographers. What it does not state is how many of those who cannot perceive a full range of colours take an active interest in those visual arts where colour has a significant role. While it has to be a concern for those producing commercial output, for example product illustration, I suspect that for most photographers it need not be a consideration.
http://www.luminous-landscape.com/essay ... lies.shtml
The bottom line is that around 10% of the human population experience colour in a way which deviates from the majority. Based on my own experience when I talk about colour vision in my presentation on composition, camera club members tend to be a self selecting group. Around 8% of the male population has the most common form of colour blindness, the inability to distinguish between red and green. Yet it is very unusual to find people at clubs who are colour blind and the overall percentage is far lower than average.
The article does address the importance for designers to take vision defects into account and claims that this should also apply to photographers. What it does not state is how many of those who cannot perceive a full range of colours take an active interest in those visual arts where colour has a significant role. While it has to be a concern for those producing commercial output, for example product illustration, I suspect that for most photographers it need not be a consideration.