We went through the same process with red. Brick red (I did remember that
it's not brown), scarlet, burnt orange, magenta. All of these are not red.
I guess just as we grow from ketchup and mac and cheese into bechemel and
gratin, our color tastes grow and expand as well. That's not to say that
bold, simple colors are wrong, and only sophisticated colors should be used.
It is merely a different way to look at color. Now, pass me some clean paper
and the crayons, please. I have a quilt to design.
--
Wendy
http://griffinsflight.com/Quilting/quilt1.htm
De-STUFF email address to reply
LOL!
you gave me a great laugh!
Carol in TX
need therapy? make a quilt!
We'll give the kids the box of 16 and we'll just sneak off to another
room...... ssshhhhhh
Course, by the time we come back, Billy, Spike and Giles will probably
have rootled all my stash and put together an awesomely color
coordinated quilt!
Hugs,
Tina
--
Terbear~Curator of the HUG Gallery~
http://gallery.ppwp.com/gallery/HUGS
Teri's quilts~
http://gallery.ppwp.com/gallery/Tquilts
"frood" <frood...@STUFFGriffinsFlight.com> wrote in message
news:afU9f.135$bU3.1...@twister.southeast.rr.com...
Someone who grew up on a remote Pacific island would likely identify "the
essence of green" differently.
What a great cross-cultural/behavioral (or is that cognitive?) psych study!
Where's a grad student when you need one?
Nann
who has her crayon box from 5th grade -- Crayola tried a round box that
year; purchase price .75 -- crayons still in it, too
"frood" <frood...@STUFFGriffinsFlight.com> wrote in message
news:afU9f.135$bU3.1...@twister.southeast.rr.com...
>Because we all (in the U.S., Canada, and probably most of "western
>civilization") grew up with Crayola crayons and knock-offs, those colors in
>those tones/intensities have become our paradigm for color. The greenest of
>greens, the reddest of reds . . . and, think about it, when Wendy said
>"burnt siena," didn't you know just what color she was talking about?
>
>Someone who grew up on a remote Pacific island would likely identify "the
>essence of green" differently.
>
>What a great cross-cultural/behavioral (or is that cognitive?) psych study!
>Where's a grad student when you need one?
>
>Nann
>who has her crayon box from 5th grade -- Crayola tried a round box that
>year; purchase price .75 -- crayons still in it, too
Different cultures do define colours differently. The word "yellow"
in Japanese is literally "tree-colour" and the word for brown is
literally "tea-colour".. and so on. I remember my Japanese teacher in
high school telling us that the green on the stop light would in fact
be considered a shade of blue in Japan.
Russian has two words for what we call "blue" which after all,
covers many thousands of shades. Dark blue, for example, navy or
royal blue, is covered by "See-nee". Light blue is "guh-lih-boy"...
that's baby blue, light blue and even the blue of faded blue jeans.
There is a light blue line on the map of the metro in St. Petersburg,
where homosexuals met up during Soviet times (when of course, the USSR
didn't have any homosexuals) so that "light blue" in Russian now
equates to "gay". The things you learn.....
-- Jo in Scotland
frood wrote:
--
Dr. Quilter
http://community.webshots.com/user/mvignali
(take the dog out for a walk)
--
Jenn/Jalynne
quilting, beads, scrapbooking, cross stitch and other 'crafti' obsessions
http:/pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/jalynne29/my_photos
Live! http://kinneykreations.com
"DrQuilter" <mvig...@dogu.washington.edu> wrote in message
news:3ss7mfF...@individual.net...
I am so with you.
I had a teacher harrass me about something similar. It was more than 30
years ago and I am still irked about it.
Red is red. There is only one red on the color wheel. Vermillion,
scarlet, cranberry etc are all shades. But the primary color is _the_
color.
Can I make a quilt with SHADES of red. Yep. And I can use 25 different
shades. People can even call it a red quilt. Might only be one true
red fabric in it though; the rest are shades. Remember those color
lessons? Value, hue and intensity? They change the color making it
something new. If they were all red, why then the different crayons
would all say red now wouldn't they? But, the labels have different
names and it's because they are indeed, different colors.
I don't think it's fair to say she has mac and cheese tastes. Perhaps
she understands something you don't. Different colors have different
names because they are, indeed, different.
marcella
"frood" <frood...@STUFFGriffinsFlight.com> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:afU9f.135$bU3.1...@twister.southeast.rr.com...
>I had a teacher harrass me about something similar. It was more than 30
>years ago and I am still irked about it.
>
>Red is red. There is only one red on the color wheel. Vermillion,
>scarlet, cranberry etc are all shades. But the primary color is _the_
>color.
>
>Can I make a quilt with SHADES of red. Yep. And I can use 25 different
>shades. People can even call it a red quilt. Might only be one true
>red fabric in it though; the rest are shades. Remember those color
>lessons? Value, hue and intensity? They change the color making it
>something new. If they were all red, why then the different crayons
>would all say red now wouldn't they? But, the labels have different
>names and it's because they are indeed, different colors.
>
>I don't think it's fair to say she has mac and cheese tastes. Perhaps
>she understands something you don't. Different colors have different
>names because they are, indeed, different.
>
>marcella
My penpal is a marine biologist, and he is 39 and lives in
Vladivostok. His favourite colours are the "pure" colours of the 6
crayons - blue, green, red, yellow, etc. He doesn't like the mixed
colours of turquoise, pink and so forth. Anything which is a true
colour is fine with him. He would get on famously with Frood's
children.
-- Jo in Scotland
Just none of those were the _particular_ brown she needed.
She was prolly looking for raw umber.
I know I get irked when I am looking for raw umber and all I can find
is burnt.
My current pet crayon peeve is the removal of Indian Red.
Crayola felt it was "culturally insensitive".
OK I realize that not everybody is schooled in geology, art, and world
commerce, but obviously that crayon was a brilliant opportunity to
bring those subjects into perspective within a lower elementary
classroom, and they blew it.
The crayon was named for the artist pigment it imitated, not
referential to a skin tone. Back in I think the 70's there was a push
to name the crayons after the pigments, it happened for some of them.
Indian red is made from a particular earth in India.
Is Indian Yellow still in the big Crayola packs? That pigment was
taken off the world market because it required bad treatment of cows
to produce. I know the color was in the crayons at least 10 years
ago.
NightMist
--
"To repeat what others have said, requires education; to challenge
it, requires brains." -Mary Pettibone Poole
There is a theory (and this addresses Gile's issues with brown a bit
perhaps as well) that children who learn name identity for colors at
an early age have difficulty with shade, hue, and tint later on. The
theory states that this early identification locks the concept in the
child's mind very specificly, and unfortunately very narrowly. Later
identification does not seem to impose the narrow limits that early ID
does.
So to be safe, I would just leave it alone as regards color. On the
other hand if this theory is correct, now would be a great time to
teach her number concepts.
NightMist
--
The complete history of Crayola colors!
Started with 8 in 1903.
Nann
--
Charlotte
http://community.webshots.com/user/charh108
"DrQuilter" <mvig...@dogu.washington.edu> wrote in message
news:3ss7mfF...@individual.net...
>I am having the hardest time with sofia and colours. she is such a bright
>little girl, and she doesn't get it. for a while I thought she might even
>be colour blind! but she can identify same colours, just not name them (in
>english or spanish - everything is amarillo). Before it was worse, we would
>ask what colour something was and she would say 'uno'! She also knows the
>numbers but I don't think she gets the concept of counting. She starts and
>keeps going up to 6 or so even if there are only two. She is 20 months old.
>When should she know these things?
>
>
--
Wendy
http://griffinsflight.com/Quilting/quilt1.htm
un-STUFF email address to reply
"Marcella Peek" <marc...@extra.peek.org> wrote in message
news:marcella-FA0EAF...@comcast.dca.giganews.com...
> In article <w3X9f.4710$yX2....@newsread2.news.pas.earthlink.net>,
Well, I don't know about Indian Yellow, but they do have Kraft Mac &
Cheese Orange now. ;-)
marcella
--
-- Kellie
kjbeanne at yahoo dot com
www.kjbeanne.com/kellie.htm
"frood" <frood...@STUFFGriffinsFlight.com> wrote in message
news:XQ8af.1073$Ea3.1...@twister.southeast.rr.com...
My kiddos are 3,4 and 13. The thirteen year old knows all of her
colors, and will argue the subtle differences between them. Olive drab
vs. army green - she knows the difference (or claims to) whereas I have
no clue. The 3 year old knows the basic colors in english, but doesn't
always get them right in spanish. The 4 year old has a much better
grasp of it and never gets them "wrong" in spanish or english. he is
also learning to actually point and count the actual number of items on
a page. a year ago he just counted, now he relates the two.
So, I'd say she will definately know her colors by the time she is 13.
That has been my personal experience, and she will be potty trained by
the time she goes to the prom. Don't stress out, and she will be fine!
Carol in TX
need therapy? Make a quilt!
"NightMist" <night...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:4368fffa...@news.madbbs.com...
Donna
--
Donna in Idaho
Website: www.LinusIdaho.org
"Johanna Gibson" <jgi...@NOSPAMtesco.net> wrote in message
news:9qlhm1551gbiueoih...@4ax.com...
>I remember my Japanese teacher in
> high school telling us that the green on the stop light would in fact
> be considered a shade of blue in Japan.
>
> -- Jo in Scotland
>Green traffic lights actually do have a lot of blue in the coloring for all
>the color blind men! Ask me how I know - having raised two color blind
>boys. You can have some really interesting conversations with boys/men who
>are color blind!
>
>Donna
There's a lot of colour-blindness in my family. We are a cesspool
of useless recessive genes.
-- Jo in Scotland
"Johanna Gibson" <jgi...@NOSPAMtesco.net> wrote in message
news:unkim1h6vq3c9sq1v...@4ax.com...
When my oldest son was in high school he was always coming home and telling
me about somebody's new car that was such & such a color. The cars were
NEVER the color he told me they were. You never knew what two colors of
socks he was going to show up in in the mornings. He finally just started
sticking with white socks.
--
Donna in Idaho
Website: www.LinusIdaho.org
"Johanna Gibson" <jgi...@NOSPAMtesco.net> wrote in message
news:unkim1h6vq3c9sq1v...@4ax.com...
All the men in my family are too. The conversation around here when the
males are together goes...."why can't the bottom light in the traffic
signal be blue? Everyone can see blue. Doesn't get confused with the
top color. Doesn't blend in with the streetlights at night. What idiot
thought up green and red?"
My grandma and sister both tested positive for color "confusion" as the
docs like to say. Gotta line up a bunch of recessive genes to get
colorblind girls. The two of them do come up with interesting outfits
at times. For years we thought my sister just had really bad taste.
marcella
>I'm so relieved to see you appearing here and apparently with good sense.
>Your temp of 105° was a serious concern to me. You were pretty close to
>frying your brain, you know. Or are you one of those that can do that over
>something minor and with no ill effects? Polly
I'm one of those people who have high temperatures over any little
virus or bacteria.
I started that when I was very very small. In fact my earliest
memories are of being very cold and people dressed like doctors and
nurses doing wicked things to make me colder. Putting me in tubs of
ice, splashing cold water on me, stuff like that.
I was supposed to be at least severely brain damaged several times as
a child. I think my mom told me that my highest fever temperature was
108 and I was definitely supposed to be dead. I guess that explains
my wardrobe (vampire chic).
My mom used to wait to take me to the doctor until my temperature
stayed over 104 for more than 24 hours or hit 106. DH freaks out when
I top 102.
It gets annoying sometimes, I'm sick, I want asprin, lots to drink,
and bed, and he is trying to drag me out the door and up the hill to
the clinic. Now the clinic is only a quarter mile from the house, but
more than half of that is a steep hill. The flippin driveway has a
switchback for heavens sake! I do not want to climb a hill like that
when I am sick. period. end of story. I do go if the fever is
prolonged, and have told him that if it hits more than 105.5 that he
should drag me there one way or another, but this trying to make me
mountain climb over every little bit of temperature, geez!
My Halloween fever lasted about 6 hours, went from normal to 105 in
the first hour, held steady for about the next 4 and then it came down
in that last hour, and it was all after hours for both the clinic and
the emergency room so he didn't have a chance to try and drag me off.
Cathy in Burnaby (formerly Vancouver)
>>
>> There's a lot of colour-blindness in my family. We are a cesspool
>> of useless recessive genes.
>> >> -- Jo in Scotland
>>
Apparently colourblindness can go hand in hand with perfect pitch, so
if they are musical they get a bonus!
Yeah, I do this for a living <G>.
Paulette in WV
"DrQuilter" <mvig...@dogu.washington.edu> wrote in message
news:3ss7mfF...@individual.net...
"frood" <frood...@STUFFGriffinsFlight.com> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:XQ8af.1073$Ea3.1...@twister.southeast.rr.com...
NightMist
both my kids like to pick their green beans up with their fingers, dip
them in ketchup and eat them like french fries! (Ok, I don't let them
do that in public)
Now THAT'S weird!
Tina
--
-- Kellie
kjbeanne at yahoo dot com
www.kjbeanne.com/kellie.htm
"Tina" <ti...@ogd-graphics.com> wrote in message
news:1131043696....@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
"NightMist" <night...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:436a46fa...@news.madbbs.com...
Mika
http://community.webshots.com/user/mikasdrms
"Tina" <ti...@ogd-graphics.com> wrote in message
news:1131043696....@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
DD#1 likes hers with squeeze margerine and some garlic salt. Hey, at least
she's eating veg!
--
Wendy
http://griffinsflight.com/Quilting/quilt1.htm
De-STUFF email address to reply
"Pat in Virginia" <pat.q...@cox.net> wrote in message
news:8JBaf.15437$IB.5709@dukeread11...
and yes, i too have plenty of ketchup on hand at the house. It is the
dip/sauce/food of choice here for the kiddos.
--
-- Kellie
kjbeanne at yahoo dot com
www.kjbeanne.com/kellie.htm
"frood" <frood...@STUFFGriffinsFlight.com> wrote in message
news:yGJaf.1178$Ea3.3...@twister.southeast.rr.com...
--
Charlotte
http://community.webshots.com/user/charh108
"Kellie J. Berger" <kjbe...@yawwhoo.com> wrote in message
news:b8Laf.12244$dO2....@newssvr29.news.prodigy.net...
Mika
http://community.webshots.com/user/mikasdrms
"Pat in Virginia" <pat.q...@cox.net> wrote in message
news:8JBaf.15437$IB.5709@dukeread11...
Mika
http://community.webshots.com/user/mikasdrms
"Mika" <tajma...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:G%Raf.50981$rE2....@fe10.lga...
Pat in Virginia wrote:
> M: Sofia is on track. The concepts you mention are perhaps a tad
> advanced for her age. Right now she is probably better off concentrating
> on concrete information. Go with what can be learned with the senses.
> Identify a dog, a button, a chair, a man, a quilt, by sight. You can
> bring in hot and cold, too, as those can be demonstrated with water.
> Identify simple sounds, such as car horn, dog barking, etc. This is a
> terrific age, enjoy it! JMO as a seasoned mom of two DS.
> PAT
>
> DrQuilter wrote:
>
>> I am having the hardest time with sofia and colours. she is such a
>> bright little girl, and she doesn't get it. for a while I thought she
>> might even be colour blind! but she can identify same colours, just
>> not name them (in english or spanish - everything is amarillo). Before
>> it was worse, we would ask what colour something was and she would say
>> 'uno'! She also knows the numbers but I don't think she gets the
>> concept of counting. She starts and keeps going up to 6 or so even if
>> there are only two. She is 20 months old. When should she know these
>> things?
--
Dr. Quilter
http://community.webshots.com/user/mvignali
(take the dog out for a walk)
NightMist wrote:
> On Wed, 02 Nov 2005 01:03:02 GMT, "frood"
> <frood...@STUFFGriffinsFlight.com> wrote:
>
>
>>Giles was working on her "homework" today, and became quite upset when she
>>couldn't find a brown crayon. I dug through the crayon bin, and pulled out
>>several brown crayons. She tried each one, and said each time "this isn't
>>brown!" Ok so the wrappers didn't say "brown", but if I was making a brown
>>quilt, I sure would have used any or all of them. I guess kindergarteners
>>don't see colors the same way we do. Burnt sienna isn't brown. Mahogany
>>isn't brown. Neither is brick red (ok, I knew that one, but the crayon
>>looked brown). And sepia? Nope, not brown.
>>
>>We went through the same process with red. Brick red (I did remember that
>>it's not brown), scarlet, burnt orange, magenta. All of these are not red.
>>
>>I guess just as we grow from ketchup and mac and cheese into bechemel and
>>gratin, our color tastes grow and expand as well. That's not to say that
>>bold, simple colors are wrong, and only sophisticated colors should be used.
>>It is merely a different way to look at color. Now, pass me some clean paper
>>and the crayons, please. I have a quilt to design.
>
>
> Just none of those were the _particular_ brown she needed.
> She was prolly looking for raw umber.
> I know I get irked when I am looking for raw umber and all I can find
> is burnt.
>
> My current pet crayon peeve is the removal of Indian Red.
> Crayola felt it was "culturally insensitive".
> OK I realize that not everybody is schooled in geology, art, and world
> commerce, but obviously that crayon was a brilliant opportunity to
> bring those subjects into perspective within a lower elementary
> classroom, and they blew it.
> The crayon was named for the artist pigment it imitated, not
> referential to a skin tone. Back in I think the 70's there was a push
> to name the crayons after the pigments, it happened for some of them.
> Indian red is made from a particular earth in India.
> Is Indian Yellow still in the big Crayola packs? That pigment was
> taken off the world market because it required bad treatment of cows
> to produce. I know the color was in the crayons at least 10 years
> ago.
>
> NightMist
Johanna Gibson wrote:
> On Wed, 2 Nov 2005 16:52:57 -0700, "Donna in Idaho"
> <daawr...@spamyahoo.com (remove spam)> wrote:
>
>
>>Green traffic lights actually do have a lot of blue in the coloring for all
>>the color blind men! Ask me how I know - having raised two color blind
>>boys. You can have some really interesting conversations with boys/men who
>>are color blind!
>>
>>Donna
>
>
> There's a lot of colour-blindness in my family. We are a cesspool
> of useless recessive genes.
>
> liin
> -- Jo in Scotland
Taria wrote:
--
>I couldn't believe it. It implies that all bilingual speakers (obviously
>referring to english and spanish because of the connotation) are of a
>particular skin colour, when on the other hand 'hispanic' supposedly
>just means you were born in latin america, where we have a wide range of
>skin colours, from very light to black, with amerindian in between and
>all the mixtures. I always suspected that by hispanic they meant someone
>with mixed spanish and amerindian genes, but they would not come out and
>say it. Of course this is not the american government but Nickelodeum.
>I told my mexican hosts a couple of weeks ago and they were outraged
>(and entertained, I must say). I have no idea what they were thinking
>but I almost wrote to complain. My problem is that I don't know how to
>word it...
Looks like you worded it just fine! Don't wait until you've calmed
down, you'll forget, and get busy, and the letter will never happen.
Fire it off now before you change your mind.
-- Jo in Scotland
When I read your initial post about bilingual brown, I thought two
languages, not color of skin. I figured Dora is bilingual, and that is
why they used the particular word. Brown because in english Bilingual
and Brown start with the same letter. Guess I am just insensitive. I
don't mean to be that way, I just am not all that sensitive myself, so
I don't notice it for others either.
Maybe bilingual blue would be a better choice.
The way I see it bilingual is great no matter what color it is! Wish I
was bilingual in any language, but especially Spanish, what an
advantage!
Carol in TX
need therapy? make a quilt!
--
Sharon from Melbourne Australia (Queen of Down Under) (and yes, I am
bilingual, well vaguely tri-lingual - good English / Polish and some French
and Japanese with a smattering of Italian and Spanish (I figure what I know
in the last 3 makes up "one"!!)
http://www.geocities.com/shazrules/craft.html (takes a while to load)
http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/shazrules/my_photos (same as website but
quicker)
"extremevalues" <extrem...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
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