line b
Well-known member
The two colours I've found most prominent on trips are purple and green.
same, and while I'm already on the thought, those are the two most prominent colors in Against The Day (from the reddit):
So there's plenty of stuff in Against the Day about light and photography. One thing I may have picked up on occurs on page 410 :
What really raised my eyebrows there is the "magenta-and-green" bit. My photographer's mind leapt immediately to the optical problem known as chromatic aberration. This is essentially a lens issue in high-contrast shooting scenarios where wavelengths of color hit the focal plane differently. In my experience this most often causes a magenta and green "fringe" around the subject, usually when there is a strong light source behind it like tree branches in front of a sunny sky. It also strikes me as no coincidence that these conditions are somewhat similar to contre-jour (French for "against daylight") photography where essentially the subject is between the camera and the light source, and typically results in a high contrast silhouette type image."Around the edges of his form, a strange magenta-and-green aura had begun to flicker, as if from a source somewhere behind him, growing more intense as he himself faded from view, until seconds later nothing was left by a kind of stain in the air where he had been, a warping of the light as through ancient window-glass."