I see blue.![]()
I see blue.![]()
I reckon, especially when you see it next to the Green. Very nice.
They aren't very blue, but compared to the standard green White's they look different. Here's a pic of my blue phase with my normal green one.
Turquoise Kurt? I think that frog could pass as turquoise!
How about teal?
*control c* *mspaint* *control v* *looks up color*
Red: 88
Green: 83
Blue: 87
Therefor it is purple! XD But I call it blue anyway because the blue still outweighs the green.
Besides in some spots its...
Red: 100
Green: 110
Blue: 119
Which means blue out weighs the red AND the green in those spots. I think....
Aren't those colours gray?
I have no problem calling them blue. But Kurt does.So, there's gotta be some shade he agrees with.
Kerry started it, but I want to continue.
How about cerulean?
Last edited by 1beataway; November 7th, 2009 at 10:19 AM. Reason: Giving credit where credit's due
Here's my comparison shot and I agree with kurt.... still green. You can;t go by digitized RGB values by picking a single pixel as a sample. The lighting and camera would give you different values. Besides, "green" is probably more subjective anyway... as any combination of blue and green could be either blue or green depending on one's own perception. We had a previous discussion about a red White's tree frog.
When I look at my white's I see a warmer yellow-green (Jade) and a cooler blue-green (Dumper). If Dumper was next to something I would consider blue, he would look very green. Ok, maybe he is teal?
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But the picture of my blue wasn't next to a regular White's!
I do think the colour is closer to teal though.
Using Chris' photo as an example. Both of my White's look Dumper, but I still call them green not blue. Blue phase to me just doesn't exist. Sure some have a bluish tinge to them, but they still are not blue, they're green. And the differences between Jade and Dumper doesn't suggest to me any kind of phase or morph, as they really aren't that drastically different. Does this make sense?
I did go to art school (college) and I am scale modeler (national champion status). I know green when I see it and can tell the differences between different shades. I know how to mix paint to replicate those hues.
In the frogs previously posted, one green has more yellow, the other more blue. It still doesn't make one yellow and the other blue.
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