Got a few color and color blindness questions?!


Question: Got a few color and color blindness questions?
Well I was born fully color blind, but being born with it made me curious about it and how other people see, sorry if I ask a lot of questions about it, I'm just interested in how other people see the world :D
Well heres my questions
1. Do some people who see in black and white also see a little bit of any other color like red or blue?(So like, an object that's red, still appears to be red, but everything else is maybe black and white or would colored things all have a red tint in them or what?)
2. Well I love to draw, any ideas on how I can color my stuff? I sorta go by what colors i hear everything is and using the pencil that matches the name, recently found out that doesn't work for darkening at the colors when I was told my drawings coloring shading was horrible! XD
3. Does people who see color have as hard of time seeing in night as I do?
4. Well im only 13 now but will I be able to drive when i get 15 in washignton state?? I keep getting mixed answers from everyone..... So I really am confused
5. When you see color do alot of things look a little like they blend in together? Like when I couldn't see my white notebook on the white countertop except for the little bit of it that stuck up...
6. This one might sound kind of stupid but can a person be fully colorblind in one eye and see color in the other?
thats about all the questions I have so thanks for anyone that replies

Answers:

Best Answer - Chosen by Voters

People who are not color blind see all the colors in an object, room or in their surroundings. Like if I go outside in the spring, I see green trees, blue sky, white clouds and flowers in many different colors. There are many different colors and shades of those colors that a person who is not color blind sees. Colors will sort of blend together if a person is nearsighted and trying to see a distant object, but not when one has good vision. Whatever I see that is black or white is really black or white.

There are different forms of color blindness. Being totally colorblind is less common than partial color blindness. The more common form is being unable to differentiate between red and green, or blue and yellow. Color blindness can be hereditary or acquired.

I really don't know the rules for driving in Washington, but in most states, if you can differentiate between red and green and recognize and read road signs, you can get a license. You don't actually have to really be able to see red and green, just to differentiate between the two. So if you see some colors, you can probably get a license.

If a white fairly flat object, like your notebook, is sitting in on a white counter, even one with normal color vision might not see the book until the person got close to it, because it might blend into the white counter.

This is a link to website that was written by someone who is colorblind and it probably answers your questions better than I can. http://color-blindness.net/ -

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_blind… -
http://color-blindness.net/ -




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