this post was submitted on 13 Mar 2024
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My favourite colour is yellow mainly because I have red-green colourblindness but yellow never steers me wrong. It's always honest with me.
I don't generally go out of my way to have everything yellow, though when work moved into a new location and offered me a choice of paint for my office, I did choose it, which raised some eyebrows. But it was north-facing and I'm in Canada where winters can dark fast. I wanted something to counterbalance that and the offices next to mine where people chose neutral grey and blue looked kind of dingy and cave-like to my eye at least. I think yellow was a win!
You just summed up something I never put together directly. I owned a body shop for years and was a painter. My color vision was critical. I learned to spot oddities in peoples preferences and color choices as a result. It is like an intuitive connection where I can tell there is a pattern, but it is not fully defined as to why it exists. I can often tell when a person is color blind based on their color choices and preferences. I thought it had to do with the way they lean into certain tones of red and green/blue. Now that you mention it, I think it is actually likely centered around yellow. I just hadn't pinpointed it specifically. There is a tendency for leaning into the yellow side of red and staying away from purples and some parts of blue/green and complementary palettes. It is not as simple as just staying away from base colors, but more the choice of specific palette combinations.
That has long been a curiosity and something of a party trick for me. Thanks for helping me better define it.
Yeah you nailed it! It's generally not a problem at the primary colour level. For example, I have no trouble distinguishing the red and green of a traffic light. But there are, like you say, a lot of ways to mix colours and that's where we get into trouble.
There is a type of colourblindness that affects your perception of yellow, but the red-green types are far more common in the population. It is also much more common in men than women. This is because the trait is carried by X chromosomes, and for a woman to exhibit it, she must have the gene on both X's. Men only have one X and one Y, so if you have it on your X, you're doomed! lol
One thing you may or may not have noticed is colourblind people tend to be more sensitive to subtle differences in shade. This is a compensation the brain works out, similar to how fully blind people develop a sharper sense of hearing. The military even noted that this can help in spotting camouflage on an air photo, and it's one of these rare cases where colourblind individuals were specifically sought out. It usually goes the other way, though. Like we are steered away from careers as electricians, pharmacists, etc. and I totally get that. It's not discriminatory. It's just common sense! :)