Try this Colour Test

Colour test

Colour test

It is a nice test and fun to do.
I had not seen this kind of test before.
Thanks.
(Besides my score was 12)
 
Harumph

Harumph

I personally find the scoring wrong, and the areas of failure as presented do not specifically point to which errors I made, they do however, point to bunches, which lead me to believe that the errors fall in the temperature range spikes of a fluorescent light source.

For maximum color contrast adjustment in Photoshop I use eye glasses that i invented that are in tune to a quarter wave harmonic order of color based on a magenta filter of a standard density as a 'tuning fork'. Even with the glasses I get the same score, it's more about the monitor than the pilot.
 
it's more about the monitor than the pilot.


Definitely about the monitor. My big one that I do most of my editing on is not calibrated by anything but my eye, and that took a while of looking at a developed picture and adjusting the monitor so I saw the same picture on the screen as I was holding in my hand. I still missed a few when I first did that colour test but I thought you guys here would like it too.
 
I took this on an uncalibrated MSI netbook and got a 12. I don't know what this means, really, but I was surprised it was this good.

Bruce
 
''You have perfect color vision!"

It's quite funny, though, as I did this test a while back on my old monitor and had a pretty mediocre score. This time I really didn't concentrate much and was sure I would do really badly. My monitor now is a $250 23'' Dell HD display. Nothing fancy at all but I gues it does the trick.
 
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I'm stunned ... I scored a perfect zero!

Not what I expected at my age ... and my monitor is a Phillips something or other from a chain varity electrical store.
 
impossible for the color blind like me.... Just even thinking about doing this test makes my head hurt. I need to go to bed now! :(

EDIT: tried anyways and got a 165.... yay.
 
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pevelg, thanks for posting that, I've wondered how the shades would look in Black and White.

Do you practice your photography with colour film or Black and White? I'm really curious since my father is colour blind and I'd like to get him into photography (or try) now that he's retired. I think he would like it.
 
I just gave it a go on my Asus netbook w/9" screen. Got 35. And I am sitting on my porch under overcast skies.
Not great, I guess, but still above the median. I'll try it again on the monitor I use for editing and see what I get.
I would like to see the rows scored individually, though. I wonder if I did better on the first one or two or on the last.
Rob
 
pevelg, thanks for posting that, I've wondered how the shades would look in Black and White.

Do you practice your photography with colour film or Black and White? I'm really curious since my father is colour blind and I'd like to get him into photography (or try) now that he's retired. I think he would like it.

Actually, being color blind does not mean you only see in white and black. There is an eye condition where the (rods?, maybe cones) are dysfunctional and this causes one to see in only black and white. However, that condition comes with other consequences (poorer ability to see detail).

In my case, I have a great difficulty in distinguising shades of colors. Things just look the same.

As for your question, I shoot both color and black and white. However, when shooting color I am now only shooting slides. When scanning, I use IT8 targets to correct color and usually don't do any other changes to color. Another thing one should note is that I was never aware that I was colorblind until much later in life. I thought what I saw was/is normal and what everyone else saw. For example, during highschool I did a lot of art work and won some nice awards, but the judges never saw what I saw in my artwork and I saw it through colorblind eyes. Sort of freaky!!! :D

Since learning about colorblindness, I've started shooting more black and white and this has made post processing easier for me. I'd recommend B&W for your father as it makes the task easier and more enjoyable.
 
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