The first car I bought my lad was blue, when talking to his mates about the car dad bought him, on each call he used a different colour, think he may also have a problem with memory..lol.. true story
The wiki page for Ishihara is interesting. It shows you the test an explains how it works. There's a link at the bottom of it to more examples. Look at the picture below for three seconds and say what number you see. please log in to view this image This is an example of an Ishihara colour test plate. Apparently, the number "74" should be clearly visible to viewers with normal colour vision. Viewers with red-green colour blindness will read it as "21",[1] and viewers with monochromacy may see nothing. I say apparently because I can only see 21. This goes a long way to explaining why my wife insisted we had bought a brown settee when I was convinced it was green!
I’ve taken that test about 20 times and still cannot understand why people cannot see it. Mind you it’s a good job it’s not a spell test... I’d ****ing fail... dismally
It was only after I was chosen to administer the Ishihara test to potential apprentices many years ago that I discovered my own colour blindness. In your example I can just about guess at 21.
I'll give you multiple likes for that I'm scared to admit to it in certain environments,ie:- the workplace.As in,'Oh Ric can you put that in the red skip'?...Mmmm,'I'm colour blind so what skip is that'?.....'The one next to the green one' is a common answer
I'm already wondering if half your comments about our players were actually made after seeing an opposition player do something...
I do sometimes wish I had no sense of smell. Working next to my mate at work, the beer farts can be truly harrowing
Ted Lowe commentating on Pot Black, a snooker programme from the 1970's: "Griffiths is snookered on the brown, which, for those of you watching in black and white, is the ball directly behind the pink". There are several variants of that so it's possible he did it more than once.