I think iโve requested this before and idk if anybody replied to it bc i forgot to check on it and ended up losing the post but does anybody have that picture of those girls standing around a very fat tuxedo cat w/ their knees slightly bent? Hereโs an extremely quick + bad sketch of my memory of it the colors dont matter all I know is they looked like they were dressed up for a party
Designer Florian de Looij’s playful GIFs’ geometrical nature lends itself to designing an interesting GIF. By transforming, regenerating, slicing and altering the shape of each figure into smaller singular representations of the whole, the artist creates a fun setting. Deviating from a cold standard design, where mainly the colors black, white and silver are used Florian de Looij implements a vibrant scheme to rejuvenate the typical geometric GIF.
It also helps to know if cool or warm toned look better on you. My hair has been blue, greenish blue, and aquamarine and I love it. It compliments my complexion. My natural is a cool toned dark brown.
I’ve had half of it red before. I’ve even had a super warm toned brown. That doesn’t look quite as good on me and tends to bring out the red and uneveness of my skin on my face.
You can rock literally any trend if you learn to tailor it to you.
Right! If you’re worried about a color not matching your skin tone, think of color theory. Dark and tan skin, being earth tones, go well with any color (yay!) but pale white skin can be a challenge sometimes. Especially if you have rosatia or skin reddening or uneven tone. Cool colors (blue, green, purple) are a safe bet if it’s your first time going an unnatural color. Warm colors go well mixed with natural cool colors (dark brown, black). Blonde hair (like bleach blonde) can be a bit of a risk for pale skin if your hair is long but shorter hair (in my opinion) can rock blonde hair with white skin. It’s all about knowing how to tailor a look to you. And if you find you don’t like a color, it might just be because you’re not used to it! Give it a day or two to decide if it works or not.
Also, choosing a makeup palette that complements the hair color and skin tone can make a world of difference.
The colors that titanium changes to when different voltages are passed through.
Anodizing titanium generates an array of different colors without dyes, for which it is sometimes used in art, costume jewelry, body piercing jewelry and wedding rings. The color formed is dependent on the thickness of the oxide (which is determined by the anodizing voltage); it is caused by the interference of light reflecting off the oxide surface with light traveling through it and reflecting off the underlying metal surface.
Ok so like, as someone who knows how to dye hair and shit. I know this is a very popular request. but it disappoints me how so many ppl go for this specific color combo bc itโs hard to dye hair like this!!! and at the same time. ur doing normal ass colors itโs so disappointing. girl if ur doing an ombre like this Iโm begging u to choose fun colors. When u go brunette/blonde itโs so boring and it makes u look like just some generic ass white girl. Iโm begging u to add some flavor.
hey this is totally random, but w the numerous photos of you that you've reblogged again, I noticed you have tried a lot of different hair colors. I was just curious how you ever chose the colors, or if they were more of a spur of the moment sort of thing.
Almost exclusively spur of the moment. I treat hair dying / styling as a kind of art form lol. I have informal cosmetology training so dying my hair is an adventure of mixing dyes, experimenting with ombres, layering colors, etc.
My hair currently is dyed black but before it was indigo with purple/red roots (merlot? maybe? burgundy?) and so now my hair is black but with an indigo and burgundy sheen and it’s so pretty.
Another one I was really proud of was when I had steel/light blue roots that was a gradient to green and then an almost neon yellow at the tips. OOh and once I did chocolate undercut with a mint green top that was so gorgeous and it matched my eyes because I have a green and a brown one.
So if you’ve ever picked out paint, you know that every infinitesimally different shade of blue, beige, and gray has its own descriptive, attractive name. Tuscan sunrise, blushing pear, Tradewind, etc… There are in fact people who invent these names for a living. But given that the human eye can see millions of distinct colors, sooner or later we’re going to run out of good names. Can AI help?
For this experiment, I gave the neural network a list of about 7,700 Sherwin-Williams paint colors along with their RGB values. (RGB = red, green, and blue color values) Could the neural network learn to invent new paint colors and give them attractive names?
One way I have of checking on the neural network’s progress during training is to ask it to produce some output using the lowest-creativity setting. Then the neural network plays it safe, and we can get an idea of what it has learned for sure.
By the first checkpoint, the neural network has learned to produce valid RGB values - these are colors, all right, and you could technically paint your walls with them. It’s a little farther behind the curve on the names, although it does seem to be attempting a combination of the colors brown, blue, and gray.
By the second checkpoint, the neural network can properly spell green and gray. It doesn’t seem to actually know what color they are, however.
Let’s check in with what the more-creative setting is producing.
…oh, okay.
Later in the training process, the neural network is about as well-trained as it’s going to be (perhaps with different parameters, it could have done a bit better - a lot of neural network training involves choosing the right training parameters). By this point, it’s able to figure out some of the basic colors, like white, red, and grey:
Although not reliably.
In fact, looking at the neural network’s output as a whole, it is evident that:
The neural network really likes brown, beige, and grey.
The neural network has really really bad ideas for paint names.
Unfortunate news… scientists have discovered that shrimp do not see “extra colors”.
We thought that they did because they have 12 different molecules for photoreceptors, whereas humans have only 3. BIG difference, right??
Nope. Turns out that they simply do not have the mental wherewithal to blend, and so needed a separate receptor for each color. The human brain adds color emissions together to create a singular representative color, like reverse engineered printing. Shrimp can’t do that. They can’t take light emitting “green” and light emitting “red” and come back with “yellow”, like we do. They have to have a receptor for yellow, and are relatively horrible at distinguishing shades of colors.
So at the end of the day, not only do shrimp not have “extra colors”… they see less than we do. Shrimp can’t see the fake colors :(