Maybe you have too skinny thumbs. Really cover up the middle section. Do it with black cloth if you have to. You'll see it's the same color, top to bottom.Did it. Still not even close to same color.
Maybe you have too skinny thumbs. Really cover up the middle section. Do it with black cloth if you have to. You'll see it's the same color, top to bottom.Did it. Still not even close to same color.
Yep. The darkest black car I've ever owned actually had some blue flecks to it. Darker than the typical pearl black on some of my other cars.Most things that are painted "jet black" have a pretty decent amount of blue pigment in there too because it makes it look "blacker." Without that blue pigment it'll look more like a dull charcoal black. Not dull as in "matte" but dull as in "greyish." It'll still look black but it won't look good.
Have you ever accidentally spilled bleach on a black shirt? For some reason there's orange in there. I work with color daily but I don't get to geek out talking about it that much because there's only a couple of us who deal with it.
A long time ago they tried painting the walls pastel colors in prisons and psych wards thinking it would calm the inmates and patients. It had the opposite effect.That's another thing I find fascinating about color... It absolutely affects our emotions and behaviors. We can get emotionally attached to things being a certain color (orange five ball, anyone?) And before anyone says something like, "Well, I like an orange five ball because that's what I'm used to..." Alright. That's a part of it. But if you could choose between pictures of a purple five ball or an orange five ball to hang on your wall, which would you choose? Keep in mind, you're never going to play with this ball because it's just a picture. So you're never going to mistake it for a four ball mid runout. Ninety nine percent of us would choose the orange one because we have at least a little bit of an emotional attachment to it based on tradition. The same goes for green cloth. I've gotten used to Tournament Blue. But I'd still put Simonis Green on any table I got because it reminds me of when I was younger and all the fun I had at the pool rooms when that was the only thing you'd ever really see.
That particular optical illusion, among other things, is covered in Season 1, Episode 1, of that "Brain Games" show I was mentioning, and they explain why your brain interprets it that way. Amazing how the two sides appear so totally different in color because of the way our brain chooses to see them when they are actually the exact same color.Here's one for you guys. Which square is darker?
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They're both the same color. If you don't believe me, cover the middle section with your finger. This is your brain creating something based on the way it "should" be.
top is still darker. obvious as hell. not even close.
Even if you are still seeing different shades of darkness or color for whatever reason, it is still your mind fooling you. They are identical. Watch the episode I posted a couple of posts up in post #67 and you can see where they also take a similar image that is on paper, and then put the same color patch on both sides to prove they are identical. They also tell you why your mind is doing that to you. It can all be seen within the first four minutes of the episode.top is still darker. obvious as hell. not even close.
It's true in every sport, Doc, pool included. I've seen slugs that go at it for years and don't get one iota better in decades. And I've seen examples like Mike Sigel with natural talent that get to be the best in the world in his 20's.Just to pull this back to pool, think of what that means in the aiming conversations alone, or deflection, or squirt....and other things that people debate. And some people have a hard time "seeing" what it's about...or maybe they see it better?
How much of what we perceive is real and how much of it is not?
Could it be true that some people that get better faster, and achieve high levels of skill at pool ate better able to manage parsing out the "noise" of fake information that their brain is making up?
Could it be that some more successful training methods incorporate some things that reduce the errors that result from these neurologic quirks?
Ever notice the arguments and debates about things in pool where it seems one person sees something that others do not? Which one is "crazy"?
There is zero doubt in my mind this is a thing. We all know that after a certain point pool is mostly mental. Being able to block outside and inside distractions and noise is a huge part of getting to the next level.Could it be true that some people that get better faster, and achieve high levels of skill at pool are better able to manage parsing out the "noise" of fake information that their brain is making up?
It might be the background colors causing a difference but they are the same.top is still darker. obvious as hell. not even close.