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Posts Tagged ‘#365Ways2024’

Mr Man and I recently went on the hunt for the perfect blue gift for a friend. We did eventually find a beautiful piece of handblown glass in a dark blue with silver flecks. Lovely.

The only issue, we later discovered, was that our goal should have been a color that was closer to teal. So not the deep blue of a falling dark sky, but the vibrant green-tinged hues of a Caribbean sea over a white sand beach.

Regardless, the piece was still pretty. And it brought up the question of whether one person’s idea of blue is the same as another’s.

And then this site came across my desk: Is My Blue Your Blue?

If you think the page color is blue, click the button at the bottom right. If you think it’s green, click the bottom left. And don’t be surprised when it starts to get tricky!

For more on this topic, check out this article on the variability in color perception, and interpretation, in humans. 

The science of color perception

A lot of factors feed into how people perceive and talk about color, from the biology of our eyes to how our brains process that information, to the words our languages use to talk about color categories. There’s plenty of room for differences, all along the way.

For example, most people have three types of cones — light receptors in the eye that are optimized to detect different wavelengths or colors of light. But sometimes, a genetic variation can cause one type of cone to be different, or absent altogether, leading to altered color vision. Some people are color-blind. Others may have color superpowers.

Superpowers? Yes, please!

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Photo by Jeremy Bishop on Unsplash

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How did we get the landscape that we have today? I’m talking the big stuff, geology, not horticulture. Plate tectonics. We all know what Earth looks like now, but how did we get here?

This animation starts with the world we recognize, then rolls back time to show how the planet’s macrostructure has changed. Fun, right?

Witness 1.8 billion years of tectonic plates dance across Earth’s surface in a new animation

Mapping our planet through its long history creates a beautiful continental dance — mesmerising in itself and a work of natural art.

It’s a beautiful dance.

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Photo by Drew Colins on Unsplash

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With love.

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Photo by Anders Krøgh Jørgensen on Unsplash

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James Earl Jones (1931-2024)

His career spanned three-quarters of a century and included work from stage to voice to movies, but for me he will always be Darth Vader. I’ve written about my love of Star Wars before, and that’s my anchor when thinking about James Earl Jones. 

Who else could have captured Vader’s complex and contradictory traits? Who made us both hate and finally feel for the tortured soul that was Anakin Skywalker? 

‘Star Wars’ colleagues lead tributes to James Earl Jones

“James was an incredible actor, a most unique voice both in art and spirit. For nearly half a century he was Darth Vader, but the secret to it all is he was a beautiful human being. He gave depth, sincerity and meaning to all his roles, amongst the most important being devoted husband to the late Ceci and dad to Flynn. James will be missed by so many of us…friends and fans alike.” 

— “Star Wars” creator George Lucas

A lot of tributes are being published, and if you’re interested in learning more about his impressive and wide-ranging career, I recommend reading them. Here’s just one, from NPR: Actor James Earl Jones, a beloved baritone, dies at 93.

But if you just want to take a quiet moment to appreciate the loss of this generational talent, may I recommend this: 

Thankfully, as Luke says, no one is ever really gone.

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Photo by Josh Howard on Unsplash

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Busy, Being Silly

“Mix a little foolishness with your serious plans. It is lovely to be silly at the right moment.”

— Horace

Hope you have fun being a little silly today too.

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Photo by Harry Cunningham on Unsplash

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I gave this advice to a friend once and still find it to be useful: Whatever you do, make sure you do it on purpose.

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Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

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Light, water, kindness, and not giving up. These are huge; all there is.

— Anne Lamott

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Photo by Ian Chen on Unsplash

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If you’re the sort of person who enjoys looking up, you might like this list of September skywatching tips from NASA.

What’s on the roster? Another supermoon, a partial lunar eclipse, Saturn doing its ring thing, and something called International Observe the Moon Night, plus more more more.

Check out the article or watch the video here:

Have fun!

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Photo by Jordan Steranka on Unsplash

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“Keep your face always toward the sunshine—and shadows will fall behind you.”

— Walt Whitman

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Photo by Johen Redman on Unsplash

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Tinged in Red

Nights are cooler, the afternoon sky is a crisp blue, and the outermost leaves of the giant maple tree across the street are tinged in red. It must be time for fall foliage predictions!

Fall foliage map: When and where to expect autumn colors

Click through for animated maps and links to more info, explainers, and a printable coloring book for the kiddos (or you, I don’t judge!).

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Photo by Chad Madden on Unsplash

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