hard county
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2007
- Messages
- 785
Best/most common color for hunting deer? Brown.
Worst color? Blue.
Color we can see well but they can't? Orange.
Color you get when you mix Blue and Orange? Brown.
So, if an object is absorbing red and yellow light and reflecting blue light (what happens when we wear blue) it glows blue to a deer.
If it is reflecting red and yellow and absorbing blue light (what happens when we wear blaze) it's the absence of color.
If deer see blue and they don't see yellow or red; then doesn't brown and everything including dirt, trees, and brown leaves just look blue?
If that is the case, that deer only really see shades of blue, then isn't blaze (the absence of blue) the thing that would stick out most?
For instance, when humans are in the arctic, black is the absence of any color we can see, we can see white (as illustrated by a pinwheel, the reflection of all the colors we can see), black really sticks out when it's surrounded by white.
Why is blaze - the lack of blue in a sea of blue - better than blue?
Worst color? Blue.
Color we can see well but they can't? Orange.
Color you get when you mix Blue and Orange? Brown.
So, if an object is absorbing red and yellow light and reflecting blue light (what happens when we wear blue) it glows blue to a deer.
If it is reflecting red and yellow and absorbing blue light (what happens when we wear blaze) it's the absence of color.
If deer see blue and they don't see yellow or red; then doesn't brown and everything including dirt, trees, and brown leaves just look blue?
If that is the case, that deer only really see shades of blue, then isn't blaze (the absence of blue) the thing that would stick out most?
For instance, when humans are in the arctic, black is the absence of any color we can see, we can see white (as illustrated by a pinwheel, the reflection of all the colors we can see), black really sticks out when it's surrounded by white.
Why is blaze - the lack of blue in a sea of blue - better than blue?