I haven't gotten out much to make pictures for some time due to a physical mobility problem. I hope to get past that soon, but in the meantime I have also been trolling through my posted pictures to identify locations where I might go with my cameras which don't require a lot of walking. In the process of looking at the pictures I was reminded of an odd mental phenomenon.
American flags get included in my images periodically, often by chance rather than intention. The odd thing is that in the monochrome black and white images I often distinctly perceive the actual red, white and blue colors in the flags. Here are a couple examples:
Ikonta A 520 |
Kodak 1A Folding Pocket Special |
I can look at those two images closely and remind myself that the pictures are completely monochrome, but I cannot seem to banish the perception of color.
I posted the pictures on our local NM Film Photography group on Facebook, but I think only one person responded that they might see some color in the flags as I do.
In a related oddity, there is one picture of a flag in my Flickr photostream which does not evoke the color response for me.
Leotax Elite |
2 comments:
Hi Mike, I get it! Especially the top image. I think it's to do with colour memory and the way our brain works with it. The flag is an identifiable thing, we "know" it and what the colours should be. Rather like a white piece of paper under tungsten light, or even orange. Our brain "knows" it's white so that's what we see - if only colour film worked that way! I think the bottom image is also different as the "red" stripes are recorded as a lighter tone in that image. Interesting topic! :) - Cheers and best wishes Andy
Glad to see someone else seeing the effect. I think you are right about how it happens in the brain. I'm somewhat surprised that more people don't see it. I have only experienced the effect with images on a computer screen, so am wondering if I would see the colors in an actual monochrome print.
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