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@ezrabutler
Like Alice, I spend a lot of time going down rabbit-holes. Welcome to the tea party. Interdisciplinary researcher of the history and language of color. Advocate of curiosity. newsletter.colorphilia.com / ezrabutler.com/landing
Update
Now, Iβve completed the series about the history of web colors.
One item on note, besides for the indigo elephant in the room, a majority of the colors were initially created to provide optimal sampling of the entire spectrum of color.
They were given ill-fitting names. People then changed the colors to fit the names. Which likely ruined the optimal sampling.
I completed a short series in the Colorphilia Newsletter about research Iβve done over the past month into the origins of web colors.
newsletter.colorphilia.com/borrowed-col...
Based on a wholly unscientific analysis, I write subjectively superior social media posts after drinking a bottle of wine.
Oh look, a blogpost I completely agree with.
I did more research about the origins of web colors.
newsletter.colorphilia.com/on-the-origi...
This is tangential to my issue regarding the obsession about the serial comma. At times, it is useful, at times unnecessary.
Applying it wholesale disregards the actual content of the list. Sometimes you may wish to subtly suggest a relationship between two items, even by just omitting the comma.
Ok, there were major problems* with the Lisbon Inquisition, but it did inadvertently help introduce tomatoes to the English-speaking βNew Worldβ** colonies.
And tomatoes are delicious.***
* its very existence, for starters
** this term is an admitted misnomer
*** factually speaking
Itβs always awkward reading my own writing years later. I have so many edits to make.
From βEinstein: From Celebrity to Symbolβ
Not as if you need more ammo, but you may like these.
bsky.app/profile/ezra...
In 2020, I researched and wrote 4 essays about #Einstein for an art project I called βthe Atomic Einstein Projectβ.
If you read them, youβll see how pro-human, pro-curiosity, pro-empathy and pro-artist Einstein was.
ezrabutler.com/tag/atomic-e...
Because this is considered "original research" (which it is), as no one had apparently connected his experiments with engravings from the annual publication of "Friendship's Offering", this information canβt be put on Wikipedia.
newsletter.colorphilia.com/who-were-sir...
In November, the History of Science Museum in Oxford was kind enough to let me peruse their collection of Sir John Herschel's experimental cyanotypes.
I had found it curious that he mostly made images of young women.
Subsequently, I was able to discover the sources of a majority of them.
I say βsalveβ instead of βciaoβ when I want to sound a little less vulgar.
Carnevale, Urbino
Just a snippet of my linked experiment.
After leaving Twitter, I spent the past few years on Threads and am now, for all intents and purposes, done with that platform as well.
I think we need to rethink the whole idea of feed-driven social media, which assigns too much relevance to the new.
ezrabutler.com/moneyballing...
This entire period is fascinating to me because I was a latchkey MS-DOS kid so no VT240 or even X11, and I was about to write that we didnβt have a color monitor until windows 3.1, but I distinctly remember that Foxpro (where I wrote my first db around age 9 - β89 or β90) was a shade of blue.
If Iβm not mistaken, the VT-240 was one of the first βterminalsβ which was designed to have a local βserverβ, ie, they werenβt designing this for traditional dumb terminals, but personal computers.
But yes :) I wanted to visualize the palette, and I thought, this feels like a colorblind nightmare.
As a followup to my newsletter yesterday, I was going through the HLS colors in the 1984 VT-240 programmer reference manual, and I realized that they were using a 120Β° shifted hue spectrum: with blue (our 240Β°) being 0Β°, red (0Β°) being 120Β°, and green (120Β°) being 240Β°.
#color #research #tech
Danteβs Inferno?
I had assumed that indigo became violet because of ROY G. BIV.
I was wrong.
It turns out to be so much worse.
The co-founder of Netscape, James Clark, was one of the founders of SGI which released a violet-colored computer in 1991 called the Indigo.
newsletter.colorphilia.com/how-did-indi...
And here is a newsletter I wrote about pink.
newsletter.colorphilia.com/rethinking-p...
Here is that time I developed a theory discovering a new 2000 year old color in Lithuania.
newsletter.colorphilia.com/lithuanian-b...
Here is a piece I wrote about the origins of the word βappelblauwzeegroenβ (teal) in Belgian Dutch.
newsletter.colorphilia.com/how-appelbla...