PaulW
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Posting maps with colors
So Harald criticized me for using colors Ithaqt colorblind persons cannot see or get a color that is unwanted.
If you are colobling what are you favorite colors?
Here is what one survey said
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4x4abc
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my favorite dolor (the one I pick for my T-shirt) is not my favorite color when it comes to a color that stands out on a satellite image.
I am color blind
Google's choice of color for a track is almost impossible for me to detect
red? Unless it is 10 ft in diameter - I don't see it
a red line? Almost invisible
brown line? Invisible
blue line? If I give a track a 6 point width, I see it as a black line
white line is my first choice
yellow works good
light green kinda works
if you would ask me what color a yellow line is - my answer would be "white"
if you would ask me what color a light green line is - my answer would be "I don't know"
my brain does not have that ability
I only "know" that the lines in my sat images are yellow, because my computer tells me that they are yellow
Harald Pietschmann
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JZ
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Quote: Originally posted by 4x4abc | my favorite dolor (the one I pick for my T-shirt) is not my favorite color when it comes to a color that stands out on a satellite image.
I am color blind
Google's choice of color for a track is almost impossible for me to detect
red? Unless it is 10 ft in diameter - I don't see it
a red line? Almost invisible
brown line? Invisible
blue line? If I give a track a 6 point width, I see it as a black line
white line is my first choice
yellow works good
light green kinda works
if you would ask me what color a yellow line is - my answer would be "white"
if you would ask me what color a light green line is - my answer would be "I don't know"
my brain does not have that ability
I only "know" that the lines in my sat images are yellow, because my computer tells me that they are yellow |
Hmmm. Almost every map I've posted on here is with red. I'll have to re-think that.
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JDCanuck
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I wonder if it's possible to have your computer convert all reds to yellow on the display. Red does seem to be the preferred hilighting colour on most
maps.
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JDCanuck
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Came across this, has anyone tried it?
https://windowsloop.com/enable-colorblind-mode-in-windows-10...
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PaulW
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My problem is the when building a track off Google earth I get many colors for many tracks. I revise them to keep them all identifyable formy use.
That was my first post on the crossing the divide thread was like that. It is not an issue to choose a different color. The survey says to choose
blue, red, yellow, green in that order. The survey does not like white.
On my last post I near the corral and the colors were a mix of white faded. My choice of yellow and one segment came out green. What a pain.
And I thought posting a KML/KMX would help, but those tiny off color tracks are nearly invisible even for me. Zooming does help. It is all about my
habit of many tracks all on one file.
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4x4abc
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Quote: Originally posted by JDCanuck | I wonder if it's possible to have your computer convert all reds to yellow on the display. Red does seem to be the preferred hilighting colour on most
maps. |
as soon as I download a track, I change the color of the track
usually I chose 3 point white
Harald Pietschmann
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4x4abc
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Google Earth gives you any color imaginable
Harald Pietschmann
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4x4abc
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Quote: Originally posted by PaulW | My problem is the when building a track off Google earth I get many colors for many tracks. I revise them to keep them all identifyable formy use.
That was my first post on the crossing the divide thread was like that. It is not an issue to choose a different color. The survey says to choose
blue, red, yellow, green in that order. The survey does not like white.
On my last post I near the corral and the colors were a mix of white faded. My choice of yellow and one segment came out green. What a pain.
And I thought posting a KML/KMX would help, but those tiny off color tracks are nearly invisible even for me. Zooming does help. It is all about my
habit of many tracks all on one file. |
I have been tracking things in Baja for 7 years - every day
tried many different options for track colors and location symbols
I use 5 pt black for paved roads
4 pt white for main (wide) dirt roads
3 pt yellow for regular dirt roads
2 pt yellow for tight dirt roads
3 pt green for major foot trails
2 pt green for animal trails
Image quality on BN is lousy - you'll only see a foggy version of what I see on my monitor
[Edited on 12-17-2021 by 4x4abc]
Harald Pietschmann
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David K
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Paul, it was me...
Quote: Originally posted by David K | I see a long trail line on the left and a very short one on the right, two colors but I can't tell you what colors they are of if there is a third
color.
Green, magenta >??
Please have mercy on the color-blind, and use white, black, yellow, blue, or other 'bright' colors. Off-shades of red and green just blend together or
blend into the background earth colors to us making it hard to see or tell apart.
Thank you! |
but Harald and many other men are afflicted with this color handicap. Very few women have it.
It is passed through women to their male children from their fathers or grandfathers. Both of my grandfathers were color-blind, so no hope for me! My
son sees colors just fine and one of his grandfather did, too. We don't know about the other, due to adoption status of his mother. Seems Harald's
color-blindness is worse than mine?
Bright colors that don't blend into the background terrain work best: White, Yellow, Blue are superior for us.
Red is okay, as long as you don't use Green, since it may be hard for us to tell them apart. We can see the colors but with them on a map, we may not
tell which is red and which is green, if it matters. So use one or the other, but not both on the same map. Browns and shades of green are difficult
for us to distinguish apart.
Another weird one for us is Purple. Purple is Blue + Red, and when the red is hard to see, we mix up purple shades with dark blue shades.
Beige, tan, light green are all impossible for us to identify.
WE SEE COLORS, but we don't recognize what they are. This make ID'ing cars a bear... We would make terrible cops for that reason and because pilot's
maps have red lines, we can't be commercial airline pilots. We probably don't make good painters, either! LOL
[Edited on 12-17-2021 by David K]
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PaulW
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My two sources of mapping are GE and INEGI. When studying a INEGI topo it would be hopeless if I could not see blue and brown. A black and white topo
is pretty hard to deal with. For GE I just deal with lack of blue and lack of contour lines. However, makes a good pic if I use the good colors for my
tracks.. Makes my color printer cartridge cost high especially when I highlight all the water drainages in red and highlight the ridge lines in black.
Not a big deal to make tracks white, yellow, and blue.
Thanks for the good info.
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