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"In the wardrobe of my soul... in the section labelled 'shirts'."
[Bonzo Dog Do Da Band]
So I have a shirt that's like #FF0066. It's brighter than the florescent
tags on my desk, and when I was at dance class the other day it was
pinker than most of the ladies' outfits. As our lab manager once said,
"you've gotta be a *man* to wear that colour".
But yesterday my mother bought me a new shirt, which is like #FFB0D6.
Now that really _is_ girly...
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> So I have a shirt that's like #FF0066.
Bah that's nothing, wait until you get one that is outside the sRGB colour
space :-)
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scott wrote:
> Bah that's nothing, wait until you get one that is outside the sRGB
> colour space :-)
Do sequins count?
How about phosphorescence?
I know one kid at my school had a T-shirt that *changes* colour in
response to temperature... but then they washed it. (The school washed
but anyway...)
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> I know one kid at my school had a T-shirt that *changes* colour in
> response to temperature...
I had one of these!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercolor
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scott wrote:
>> I know one kid at my school had a T-shirt that *changes* colour in
>> response to temperature...
>
> I had one of these!
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercolor
The net result was that it had a *permanent* pattern of sweaty
underarms. Yummy!
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scott wrote:
> I had one of these!
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercolor
I gather Breast Cancer UK was looking at making bras out of this stuff,
so that you can tell if you're about to die...
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On 7/7/2010 6:17 AM, scott wrote:
>> I know one kid at my school had a T-shirt that *changes* colour in
>> response to temperature...
>
> I had one of these!
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercolor
>
I did, too... After a year or so, it lost its ability to change color,
though. The thermochromic dye probably eventually washed out.
--
~Mike
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scott wrote:
>> I know one kid at my school had a T-shirt that *changes* colour in
>> response to temperature...
>
> I had one of these!
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercolor
Zubbles work on the same basic principle, except that since they're not
enclosed, when the ring opens, oxygen gets in there and keeps it open.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
C# - a language whose greatest drawback
is that its best implementation comes
from a company that doesn't hate Microsoft.
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