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How Would You Describe Colours To The Blind?
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Red, Yellow, Pink and Blue. Orange, Purple and Green?
Brown.... Black and White?
Brown.... Black and White?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Oddly enough I often think about this (don't ask me why lol) and it makes me think back to the film "Mask" with Cher in and how he describes to the blind girl (at camp I think it was) about hot and cold and he put a hot potato (?) in her hand and said that was the colour red and she understood.
Been quite a few years since I have seen this film so not totally sure if it was a potato but I think I'm right that they were in a kitchen when he was trying to describe it to her.
Been quite a few years since I have seen this film so not totally sure if it was a potato but I think I'm right that they were in a kitchen when he was trying to describe it to her.
By using other senses to describe them:
Blue is cold - a stone, a rock
Red, yellow and orange are warm or hot - the warmth of a fire, a radiator, or the steam from a pan.
Purple is rich, soft velvet.
Green is grass or the leaves of a plant.
White is clean - the smoothness of tiles, the smell of a hospital.
Black (or dark brown) is the cold, smelly stickiness of thick mud. Or it's fingernails down a blackboard.
You just have to use your imagination.
Blue is cold - a stone, a rock
Red, yellow and orange are warm or hot - the warmth of a fire, a radiator, or the steam from a pan.
Purple is rich, soft velvet.
Green is grass or the leaves of a plant.
White is clean - the smoothness of tiles, the smell of a hospital.
Black (or dark brown) is the cold, smelly stickiness of thick mud. Or it's fingernails down a blackboard.
You just have to use your imagination.
Yes of course they feel different, they are all made from different materials, she had never met me until this day as she was a fare in my cab so had no idea of my clothing. Her observation was purely on touch as I helped her to her frond door.
I know that if you are deprived of one of your senses (in this case Blindness) you often make up for it by heightening other senses, not sure what sense was heightened in this case though, but very strange indeed!!
I know that if you are deprived of one of your senses (in this case Blindness) you often make up for it by heightening other senses, not sure what sense was heightened in this case though, but very strange indeed!!
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