By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyse site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts
These cookies enable our website and App to remember things such as your region or country, language, accessibility options and your preferences and settings.
Analytic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.
Some of the colours you've chosen will not be able to be read by someone who is colour blind.
In fact, after a second look... you might find that none of the colour co-ordinations are suitable...
My wife's boss is red/green colour blind and he says he basically sees them as shades of grey. So, I think "2" in the above would be the least problematic.
However, from reading about it, many combinations would be problematic, depending on someone's colour vision deficiency (the correct term for colour blindness).
I bought some for my Granddaughter in January this year... to see her face to realise that she's got the colours right was amazing and we was all really chuffed...![]()
Yeah! Thanks for that.
No, I'm not going to blub. That was lovely, but... oh no, I'm welling up here (hand flapping in front of face)...
Seriously, that's so lovely.![]()
The one thing that really confuses me though... is...
If you're colour blind, and you have been since birth... how on earth do you know what the colours are... she got every single colour correct once she was wearing the glasses... how on earth does that happen?!!![]()
Seriously, I believe our brain KNOWS what "green" is or "red", etc., but our eyes deceive us. We have some innate ability to understand "blue", but our eyes are showing us "grey".
We didn't have a colour TV until I was 14, but I could watch things like snooker, etc., without any problem, as I just learnt to differentiate between shades of grey.
Being colourblind doesn't necessarily mean that you see everything in black/white/grey. I've always been colourblind (as has my dad) and I see the world in full colour, but have difficulty in telling some colours apart (reds/greens/browns mainly).
Is this just a shameless attempt to get people to look at your services?